HomeMy WebLinkAbout04/19/2007
B A K E R S F I E L D
Citv Council members:
Irma Carson, Chair
Staff: John W. Stinson Zack Scrivner
Assistant City Manager Jacquie Sullivan
REGULAR MEETING OF THE SAFE NEIGHBORHOODS
AND COMMUNITY RELATIONS COMMITTEE
and Community Advisory Committee
of the City Council -City of Bakersfield
Thursday, April 19, 2007
11:45 a.m.
City Manager's Conference Room
1501 Truxtun Avenue
Bakersfield, CA 93301
AGENDA
1. ROLL CALL
2. ADOPTION OF MARCH 15, 2007 MINUTES
3. PUBLIC STATEMENTS
4. DEFERRED BUSINESS
A. Update regarding Gang and Graffiti Enforcement -Rector
B. Update regarding Proposed Strategic Plan to Combat Gang Violence and Possible
Funding
C. Gathering of Signatures by the Committee and Advisory Members in Support of AB
104 and SB 456
5. NEW BUSINESS
A. Report on the Graffiti Tracking Software -Police Department
B. Discussion regarding Programs for Fathers in Strategic Plan
6. COMMITTEE COMMENTS
7. ADJOURNMENT
S:\Council Committees\2007\07 Safe NeighborhoodsWpril 19Wpril 19 Agenda.doc
B A K E R S F I E L D
-- i
Staff: John W. Stinson
Assistant City Manager
City Council members:
Irma Carson, Chair
Zack Scrivner
Jacquie Sullivan
REGULAR MEETING OF THE SAFE NEIGHBORHOODS
AND COMMUNITY RELATIONS COMMITTEE
and Community Advisory Committee
of the City Council -City of Bakersfield
Thursday, March 15, 2007
11:45 a.m.
City Manager's Conference Room
1501 Truxtun Avenue
Bakersfield, CA 93301
MINUTES
Meeting called to order at 11:50 a.m.
1. ROLL CALL
Present: Council member Irma Carson; Chair
Council member Zack Scrivner
Absent: Council member Jacquie Sullivan
Advisory members present: Steven Perryman, BHS
Devon Johnson, OGPC
Stephanie Campbell, Cornerstone Group
Wesley Crawford, SCLC/NCAACD
Staff present: Assistant City Managers John W. Stinson and Christine Butterfield
Management Assistant Rick Kirkwood
Mayor Harvey L. Hall
City Attorney Virginia Gennaro
Assistant City Attorney Janice Scanlan
Police Chief William Rector
Capt. Tim Taylor
Lt. Greg Williamson
Recreation and Parks Director Dianne Hoover
General Services Superintendent Steve Hollingsworth
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Others present: Karen Goh, Garden Pathways
Julie Salguero, Cal State Northridge
Dennis Wallace, Habitat for Humanity
John Roberts, Kern County Probation
Miriam Krehbiel and Nick Ortiz, United Way
William Andrews, Stop the Violence
Various members of the media
2. ADOPTION OF FEBRUARY 15, 2007 MINUTES
Motion to adopt by Council member Scrivner. All ayes.
3. PUBLIC STATEMENTS
Devon Johnson spoke on behalf of Dennis Reed, who wanted to remind everyone of the
upcoming Multiple Sclerosis Walk on March 30, 2007 at Yokuts Park www.msevents.com.
Rafer Johnson Day will be held at 1001 10th Street on March 18, 2007.
Nick Ortiz with United Way spoke on behalf of Walter Williams who asked him to speak about
the Homeless Census that took place on January 25, 2007. Mr. Ortiz distributed some
statistics. There is an increase of approximately 60% in the number of homeless individuals
from the last census taken in 2006, with most of the increase taking place in Ward 1. He
noted that Bethany Services would like to explore working with the City to create adrop-in or
safe haven shelter with the Ward.
Mayor Hall indicated that his program to end homelessness in 10 years is going well, but more
work is still needed. The group meets every fourth Tuesday at 1:30 p.m.
4. DEFERRED BUSINESS
A. Update regarding Gana and Graffiti Enforcement - Linn
Captain Taylor gave updates on both gang and graffiti enforcement.
Gang Enforcement: In February, the gang unit made 181 arrests, 114 of which were
felonies and 67 were misdemeanors. They responded to 27 felony and 45 misdemeanor
warrants. Fifteen guns were seized. There were 465 interviews and 530 probation/parole
searches. These numbers do not include statistics from regular patrol officers.
Graffiti Enforcement: In February, 13 arrests were made compared to 6 in 2006.
Seven of those were adults and 8 were juveniles, with 2 of those released to a parent.
Sixteen offenses were cleared compared to 5 last year.
Committee member Scrivner thanked the Police Department for their efforts as he is
seeing a big difference.
Advisory member Perryman asked if the Police Department might make periodic visits to
Bakersfield High School to compare notes. Their staff recently caught three to four taggers
in the last two weeks.
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In response to a question from Mayor Hall, Captain Taylor said that the Police Department
interacts regularly with the High School officers, and Kern County Probation and on issues
including truancy. He believes it would be a good idea to meet with the High School in
regard to their graffiti issues, also.
Committee member Scrivner noted the positive affects of the City's Community
Prosecution Program on the graffiti problems.
B. Update regarding Joint City/County Gang Task Force -Williamson
Lt. Williamson and Karen Goh stated that the plan incorporates most suggestions. There
is a need to get residents most affected by the violence to give input, which is an integral
part of plan for prevention.
Committee Chair Carson reported that the plan will be discussed at the Joint CityCounty
meeting on March 19, 2007. She has been meeting with various groups in Bakersfield,
who will make public statements during the meeting. She thanked those who worked on
the plan.
County Probation Chief Roberts recognized the hard work to complete the draft plan in the
short time frame.
Advisory member Crawford said that one component that is missing and that is the issue of
employment for those who have been released from custody. Ms. Goh noted that it is
addressed in general terms within the plan. Committee Chair Carson stated the plan is
still in draft form and more input will be obtained. County Probation Chief Roberts stated
that this issue is being addressed in the current negotiations for prison reform.
Advisory member Perryman suggested perhaps the State Department of Corrections
contract with local businesses to hire those who were released from custody, with the
State picking up one half of the cost.
Advisory member Campbell asked if there are any statistics available on repeat offenders
and the reasons behind it. Police Chief Rector stated that either the State Probation or
Parole offices could provide that information. County Probation Chief Roberts stated that
the amount is approximately 70%, some of the reasons being technical violations such as
dirty drug tests.
C. Update on SB155 -Gennaro
City Attorney Gennaro gave a brief update and indicated they would provide support letters
for consideration at the next meeting.
D. Discussion regarding Possible Support of AB 104 (Solario) -Gennaro
City Attorney Gennaro gave a brief update and indicated they would provide support letters
for consideration at the next meeting.
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E. Update regardinq Park Security Program
Tape back in use
Police Chief Rector stated that background checks were completed for the new
employees. There have been eight applicants so far, seven of which still need to pass
screenings. Towards end of March, the Police Department will provide field training.
The applicants were recruited from within the Department, Bakersfield College criminal
justice program, and CSUB. The recruitment is still open and applications will be available
at the City's Job Fair on April 6, 2007.
In response to a request from Committee member Scrivner, Police Chief Rector stated that
there will be teams of two riding in separate cars. They will be the "eyes and ears of the
Department", but will not provide enforcement.
Recreation and Parks Director Hoover stated that the collaboration with Kern Security for
night patrol of the parks will continue.
5. COMMITTEE COMMENTS
Tape malfunction
In response to a request for an update on the Valley Plaza issues, Police Chief Rector
stated that the Police Department, Valley Plaza gang unit and school resource officers
continue to patrol the area. Additionally, there is a monthly meeting with Valley Plaza staff,
Crime Prevention unit and the merchants.
Committee Chair Carson asked for more information regarding gang injunctions.
There is a press conference regarding SB 550 (Ashburn) on March 16, 2007 at 9:30 a.m. at
Martin Luther King Jr. Park.
There will be a panel discussion regarding gangs on March 29, 2007.
6. ADJOURNMENT
The meeting was adjourned at 12:45 p.m.
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OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER
MEMORANDUM
April 19, 2007
To: Alan Tandy, City Manager
From: John W. Stinson~sistant City Manager
Subject: City expenditures towards gang enforcement and prevention related
to implementation of the Strategic Plan to address Gang Violence
Attached are several memos from city departments which outline the current
commitment of city resources to address gangs and gang violence. They include
programs and initiatives of a diverse and varied nature including gang enforcement and
prevention activities of the Police Department; community prosecution efforts of the City
Attorney's Office; graffiti abatement efforts by Public Works; and recreation programs
and community group support focused on gang prevention efforts offered by Recreation
and Parks. In addition to these specific activities there are also other city activities that
are indirectly related to gang suppression and prevention activities such as routine
police patrol and related support activities, park patrol and security, economic
development activities providing jobs and revitalizing blighted areas, and other city
sponsored community events and activities such as the recent city job fair, national
night out, neighborhood watch, and other programs.
As discussed in these reports, city resources are identified in excess of $~ million are
committed annually to these efforts.
S:\JOHN\ATPROJ\Expenditures towards gang enforcement and prevention.doc
BAKERSFIELD POLICE
MEMORANDUM
Date: April 6, 2007
To: Alan Tandy, City Manager
From: W. R. Rector, Chief of Police ~-
.. .
APR 0 6 2007
C1T~ r . 3~r~-s ~~:
Subject: Police Department Expenditures related to Gang Activities FY 2005/200fi
Response for Council Member Carson
The attached memorandum authored by Captain Tim Taylor outlines Police Department expenditures
for FY 2005/2006 related to our strategy for impacting gang violence in the community.
In anticipation of the joint plan with the County it appears most of the projected cost is related to
County functions. As you can see based on the attachment of expenditures, the City/Police
Department currently invests over five million dollars annually to combat gang violence. I should note
this does not include program costs for children through the Recreations and Parks Department. The
department has already met our obligation to all specific action points in the joint report; with the
exception of creating a data sharing platform for. police agencies in Kern County and the Sheriff's
Department. This is an ongoing process; and police department staff has been involved with product
research and is working with City I.T. on this project. We are looking at a projected three year project
time; using grant money to fund the project.
Over the scope of FY 2007/2008 we plan to continue on the same path or strategy. We are beginning
to see moderate declines in gang violence with increased support from the community.
The department will also:
• Assign one detective to the local FBI Gang Task Force.
• Continue to work with the Sheriff's Department/Probation Department/Parole Gang -Units
• Utilize video camera surveillance in a variety of locations where gang violence persists; to
assist in ongoing investigations.
• Teaching the G.R.E.A.T. and Parent project principles to families at various school or park
locations.
• Use crime analysis to provide more "real time" information to gang and patrol officers; to
impact emerging crime trends.
If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to call.
BAKERSFIELD POLICE
MEMORANDUM
DATE:
TO:
FROM:
SUBJECT:
April 6, 2007
W. R. Rector, Chief of Police
Tim Taylor, Captain, Operations Division -East
Costs to Combat Gang Violence
The Bakersfield Police Department continues to combat gang violence through its philosophy of
education, prevention, intervention, and suppression. Education and prevention efforts include Drug
Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) and Gang Resistance Education and Training (GREAT);
intervention is provided by our Police Activities League (PAL); and suppression is accomplished
predominately through the Department's Special Enforcement Unit (SEU). The Patrol and Traffic
Sections, along with Narcotics and Graffiti Units provide additional suppression through their hard
work. The Investigations Division's Crimes Against Persons (CAP) Detail and Crime Scene Unit
(CSU) perform thorough follow-up investigations, as well as the collection and documentation of
evidence to ensure the identification and prosecution of suspects who commit gang crimes. Our
commitment to combating gang violence is driven by the City Council's number one goal and guiding
principal which is to "provide quality public safety services."
The .approximate costs to combat gang violence during calendar years 2005 and 2006, including
salaries, benefits, equipment and training were:
Education and Prevention:
DARE' - $730,152
GREAT2- $157,055 $ 887,207
Intervention•
PAL- $504,793 $ 504,793
Suppression•
SEU- $5,363,231
Investigations3- $3,516,950 $ 8,880,181
Total $10,272,181
Calculations based of 30% of an assigned officer's time for DARE instruction.
Same as above but GREAT started July '06 so total represents six months.
CAP - 50% of overtime & 85% of regular time 2005; 58% of overtime & 85% of regular time 2006
CSU - 85°~ of overtime & 85% of regular time 2005; 47% of overtime & 85% of regular time 2006
Narcotics - $4,406.00 for the 2005/2006 buy-bust operation.
Graffiti - $205,000 clean-up costs for 2005 and 2006 based on 10% of all graffiti attributed to gangs:
2005/$750,000 total citywide; 2006/$1,300,000 total citywide
BA E
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OFFICE OF THE CITY ATTORNEY
MEMORANDUM
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April 13, 2007
TO: JOHN W. STINSON, ASSISTANT CITY M AGE
FROM: VIRGINIA GENNARO, CITY ATTORNEY ~
SUBJECT: COST ALLOCATION FOR GANG STRA GIC PLAN IMPLEMENTATION
Pursuant to your request, below is an estimate of the costs associated with
implementation of the Gang Strategic Plan:
As gang and drug activity are inter-related, no plan to combat gangs can be
implemented without a plan to combat drug use and sale, as well. Funding considerations for
the strategic plan will need to include work to be handled by the community prosecutors
involving gangs and drug activity.
Currently, the associate attorneys prosecute several quality of life crimes associated
with gangs and drugs: Penal Code section 12025 and 12031 (gun possession); Health and
Safety Code section 11532 (loitering for drug related purposes); and Penal Code section
647(f) (under the influence of certain drugs or alcohol in public). We anticipate an additional 3
hours per week because an increase in police activity involving these charges will result in a
higher volume of cases for the community prosecutors..
It is not just prosecutions of the above crimes which must be taken into consideration.
Code enforcement officers already play a part in the war on gangs and drugs. When code
enforcement officers inspect a house pursuant to an inspection warrant, if illegal contraband
is in plain view, the police department is notified. Additionally, .when narcotics officers are
executing a search warrant and see code violations, code enforcement officers are called to
the scene to document and write up the violations. Currently, the community prosecutor
assists with one to two inspection warrants and warrant returns per week. Approximately 2 to
4 hours per week are spent reviewing and redrafting documents. If the violations turn to
criminal charges, the community prosecutor will handle the case. It is anticipated that the
strategic plan will increase the time spent on inspection warrants and/or criminal prosecutions
approximately 4 hours per week.
Currently, the community prosecutors spend an average of 15 hours per week
(approximately 3 hours per case) drafting oppositions and arguing Pitchess motions (motions
made by criminal defendants to access police officers personnel files for complaints
regarding dishonesty or excessive force). Any increase in criminal prosecution will result in a
commensurate increase in time spent on such motions. Just one additional case alone may
result in an increase of 3 hours of time per week.
Virginia Gennaro, City Attorney
Apri113, 2007
Page 2
Increased enforcement will also result in the community prosecutors filing gang, drug
and nuisance abatement civil actions. Such civil actions are time consuming and require
close work with the police department. It is anticipated that, initially, up to 15 hours per week
will be dedicated to drafting, arguing, defending and following up on these injunctions.
Therefore, it is anticipated that the implementation of the strategic plan will result in an
increase of 25 hours per week (62.5%) of time spent by the community prosecutors. Such
increase equates to approximately $60,000 annually.
VG/js
S:\Manager\MEMOS\06-07\strategicplancosts.doc
•
B A K E R S F I E L D
DATE: April 11, 2007
TO: John Stinson, Assistant City Manager
FROM: Dia ~ over, Recreation & Parks Director
RE: Programs and Services for Gang Prevention
The City of Bakersfield Recreation and Parks Department provides the following alternative
activities and services for young people to assist in combating gang violence. This past year
we have continued our efforts to prevent youth from joining gangs. It is cheaper and more
effective to prevent behavior rather than to react to it. We engage youth exhibiting high risk
characteristics and keep them away from gang activity through broad based community
partnerships and a wide variety of recreational programs.
Dr. Martin Luther Kinq Jr Communitv Center
• Open Gym Spring Camp
• Adult Fitness Drop In Game Room
• Youth Academy Weight Room
• Homework Help Computer Class
• After School Program Aerobics
• Tennis _ S F
• Dance Troupe
• Camp King
ummer ree Lunch Program
USTA Youth Tennis Program
i otai tquipment/Supplies: $22,000
Total Staff Cost: $180,500
Silver Creek Communitv Center
• After School Program Jazz & Tumbling
• Camp Fun (Summer Day Camp) Theater Classes
• Hip Hop Kickboxing
• Karate & Self Defense Tae Bo
• Gymnastics Tennis
• Cheerleading Music Classes
20 Additional Classes Targeting Youth
~ uidi Cqu~pmenv5uppnes: $13,550
Total Staff Cost: $197,500
Sports
• Youth Basketball Cross Country Meet
• Flag Football Sand Volleyball Tournaments
• Wrestling Camp
• Blitz Football Camp
• Soccer Classes and Camps
• Jam Basketball Clinic
• Adult Softball Leagues and
Tournaments
• T-Ball Program
• Golf Lessons
• Bike Rides
• In-Line & Roller Skating Classes
• Skateboard Park and Events
Total Equipment/Supplies: $31,350
Total Staff Cost: $175,400
Aauatics
• Jr. Lifeguard Program Recreational Swim
• High School Clinics • Swim Teams
• Water Polo Camp HUD Discount Passes
• Diving Camps Spray Parks (Beale, Jefferson,
• Swim Lessons MLK, Planz, Wayside)
Total Equipment/Supplies: $788,600
Total Staff Cost: $867,000
Special Events
• Extreme Teen Nights (Aquatics) • Beale Band Concerts
• Family Fun Nights (Aquatics) Musicfest Concerts
• Turkey Splash (Aquatics) Good Neighbor Festival
• Underwater EggStravanganza Juneteenth Event
(Aquatics) Kwanzaa Celebration
• Spring Carnival (Aquatics) Globetrotter's Clinic
• Float in Movie Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Birthday
• Polar Bear Plunge Celebration
• Bit of Bakersfield Springtime Egg Hunt
• Family Fun Factor • Christmas Party at Dr. Martin Luther
• Halloween Haunted Trail King, Jr. Community Center
• Turkey Shoot
• Movies in the Park
Total Equipment/Supplies: $31,500
Total Staff Cost: $204,010
Collaborative Partnerships
• Greenfield Collaborative • Lowell Rally
• Stop the Violence Casa Loma Rally
• Southeast Neighborhood East Bakersfield Collaborative
Partnership Safe Neighborhoods Task Force
• Church United to Make a • Police Activities League
Difference • Boys & Girls Club
2
• Friendship House
• Prodigy
• Mothers Against Senseless
Killing
• NE Plus Ultra Temple 522
• Sheriff Activities League
• Mercy Hospital Rockets
• Girl Scouts
• Boy Scouts
• Kern High School District
• Joint City, County, Standing
Committee to Combat Gang
Violence
Total Staff Cost: $12,600
Potential Emglovment/Volunteer Services
Over 215 employment opportunities in the following areas:
• Lifeguards • Program Leaders
• Cashiers Site Managers
• Assistant Pool Managers Assistant Site Managers
• Pool Managers
• Aquatic Coordinators
Youth Officials
Laborers/Facility Workers
• Program Coordinators
Various volunteer opportunities are available at special events & community centers.
Total Equipment/Supplies: $ 887,000
Total Staff Cost: $1,636,975
Grand Total $2,523,975
The Safe Neighborhood Task Force identified three ways to combat gangs and gang
activity; the three methods are prevention, intervention, and suppression. The
Recreation & Parks Department plays an important role in preventing youth from joining
gangs. if we ask youth to say "No" to gangs, we need positive alternatives to which
they can say "Yes':
We Create a Quality Community through People, Parks, and Programs!
S A K E R S F I E L D
CITY OF BAKERSFIELD
MEMORANDUM
TO: Raul Rojas, Public Works Director
FROM: Steve Hollingsworth, General Services Superintendent
DATE: April 12, 2007
SUBJECT: Graffiti Program Budget
The General Services Division's budget in FY 06/07 for all graffiti related items
is $1,721,000.
The Police Department estimates that 10 % of all graffiti tags is gang related,
85% is "tagger crew" and 5% is miscellaneous vandalism.
April 19, 2007
Assembly Member Jean Fuller
State Capitol, Room 3098
Sacramento, California 94249-0001
Re: Assembly Bill 104 (Solorio)
Dear Assembly Member Jean Fuller:
Due to an increase in gang violence in our community, the Bakersfield
City Council formed the Safe Neighborhoods and Community Relations
Committee. We are the citizens that comprise the advisory sub-committee
which focuses on the reduction of gang violence in the community.
In January 2007, Assembly Member Solorio, introduced Assembly Bill
104. This bill authorizes city attorneys to access much-needed criminal history
information when proceeding with civil abatements and injunctions designed to
curb gang activity.
On March 28, 2007, the Committee on Appropriations unanimously
passed the bill. We urge you to support the bill and give the Bakersfield City
Attorney and her staff the tools to help combat gang violence in our
community.
Yours very truly,
To be signed at the Committee meeting
cc: Senator Roy Ashburn
Senator Dean Florez
April 19, 2007
Assembly Member Nicole Parra
State Capitol, Room 5155
Sacramento, California 94249-0001
Re: Assembly Bill 104 (Solorio)
Dear Assembly Member Nicole Parra:
Due to an increase in gang violence in our community, the Bakersfield
City Council formed the Safe Neighborhoods and Community Relations
Committee. We are the citizens that comprise the advisory sub-committee
which focuses on the reduction of gang violence in the community.
In January 2007, Assembly Member Solorio, introduced Assembly Bill
104. This bill authorizes city attorneys to access much-needed criminal history
information when proceeding with civil abatements and injunctions designed to
curb gang activity.
On March 28, 2007, the Committee on Appropriations unanimously
passed the bill. We urge you to support the bill and give the Bakersfield City
Attorney and her staff the tools to help combat gang violence in our
community.
Yours very truly,
To be signed at the Committee meeting
cc: Senator Roy Ashburn
Senator Dean Florez
April 19, 2007
Senator Patrick Leahy
433 Russell Senate Office Building
United States Senate
Washington D.C. 20510
Re: Senate Bill 456 (Feinstein)
Dear Senator Leahy:
Due to an increase in gang violence in our community, the Bakersfield
City Council formed the Safe Neighborhoods and Community Relations
Committee. We are the citizens that comprise the advisory sub-committee
which focuses on the reduction of gang violence in the community.
In January 2005, Senator Feinstein introduced S. 155 (The Gang
Prevention and Effective Deterrence Act of 2005). The bill was referred to the
Committee on the Judiciary and remained there.
In January 2007, Senator Feinstein introduced S. 456 (The Gang
Abatement and Prevention Act of 2007). It, too, has been referred to the
Committee on the Judiciary. The purpose of this letter is to urge your support
for Senate Bill 456. This legislation will provide much needed tools for law
enforcement to crack down on the proliferation of gang activity within our
community.
Please take the necessary steps to get S. 456 before our legislators.
Thank you for your consideration.
Yours very truly,
To be signed at the Committee meeting
cc: Senator Diane Feinstein
BAKERSFIELD POLICE
MEMORANDUM
Date: March 6, 2007
To: John W. Stinson, Assistant City Manager
From: W. R. Rector, Chief of Police ~`~~
Subject: Graffiti Tracker
~''~ 1 ~' 2001
Captain Bivens contacted a sales representative of Graffiti Tracker to determine what
the system entailed and associated prices. Basically, their system does the same thing
we do with one exception; their digital cameras have GPS capabilities that mark the
location of graffiti tags, so there is no need to manually enter the location.
Our work crews also take digital pictures of the tags, and the pictures and location are
manually entered into our system. Our graffiti officers can then ask GIS to do a
mapping of similar tags to identify the number and location.
The Graffiti Tracker system has a start up fee of $30,000 for software and system
access. Additionally, staff would require eight cameras at $1,000 each for clean up
crews and graffiti officers. The annual fee is $30,000 for system access and analysis
which increases with more tags.
Staff already performs what this system offers. Officers still have to identify the tags
and do the investigative work to identify the suspects and make the arrests. The only
difference is that the Graffiti Tracker system GEO maps the tags.
I cannot recommend purchasing this system, since essentially we are currently doing
what the Graffiti Tracker would do; with our existing staff. Our additional Crime Analyst
position will assist with the potential mapping of graffiti offenses; when it would enhance
the investigation.
WRR/RB/vrf
Minister Wesley Crawford Sr.
MAR ? :' 2QQ7 The People's Missionary Baptist Church
_. 1451 Madison, F.O. Box 70072
Bakersfield, California 93387
John W. Stinson, Assistant City Manager
City Manager's Office
1501 Truxtun Ave.
Bakersfield, California 93301
March 21, 2007
Subject: Helping father's in the hood. Men want to improve the lives of their children and are
challenging anti-fatherhood policies. Father's are needed and their roles shouldn't be overlooked,
and I am trying to promote apro-fatherhood movement. We are fathers too!
Request: I am requesting that the above subject be placed on the Tuesday April 17, 2007 agenda
for discussion and some typed of action.
Dear Assistant Manager John W. Stinson
For the past 20 years I have had a passion and persistence about re-entry of fathers
into the lives of their families and children as well as society. Fathers are being handicapped by
their historical family, economic political and educational situations when it comes to improving
the lives of their children and their families in our society. After 20 years I still find it difficult to
resume my role as a father after being incarcerated. Men who been to prison have limited
participation in the American society. There is discrimination in housing, employment, and
education. Segregation has been outlawed but it continues to exist in many areas for African
American men and women who have been to prison. For instance, it has been twenty years since I
was released from the institution, and I am still dealing with this discrimination and segregation.
The United States is the world's leader of fatherless families. As an advocate to support the often
difficult task of fatherhood I am requesting that the Kern County Board of Supervisors spearhead a
fathers' issues forum and resource fair. This event should be co-sponsored with the city of
Bakersfield to formulate fatherhood resolutions within our county. One is designed to help
facilitate the re-entry of fathers into the lives of their families and children. Secondly, the other
should support the efforts and activities of individuals, organizations and institutions that honor
fatherhood on Father's Day.
In June of 2001 President Bush brought attention to the importance of fathers during a National
Summit on Fatherhood in Washington D.C. That year Republicans wanted to spend $64 million on
federal block grants to community and faith-based organizations that gave men training, in
employment, and in parenting as well as making their marriages work. In addition President Bush
in his 2002 budget did earmark an additional $300 million for current programs that assist state
social service agencies in keeping families together. So why would you not deal with fathers and
mothers and barriers to employment facing young and adult Black men and women with criminal
records in this gang violence in Kern County strategic Plan.
The Kern County Board of Supervisors, Michael Rubio Co-Chair, Mike Maggard, Ray Watson;
and Co-Sponsors Bakersfield City Council members: Irma Carson, Co-Chair, Jacquie Sullivan,
and Zack Scrivner to host a local; state and county leadership father summit at Cal State University
Bakersfield through Dr. Fong, Chairman of the Criminal Justice department where they will
discuss the many barriers to fatherhood, criminal record expungement, father's rights and
concerns, effective parenting skills, child support and addiction recovery and renewal.
According to United States Chicago Congressman Danny K. Davis a father of two, government
reports stated that children from fatherless homes account for 63 percent of youth suicides, 71
percent of pregnant teens, 90 percent of homeless and runaway youth, 5 percent of all children that
exhibit behavioral disorders, 85 percent of youth in prison and 71 percent of youth that haven't
completed high school. Daughters of fatherless families are 90 percent more likely to become
victims of sexual abuse and rape. It is not the presence of a biological father that puts little girls at
risk; it is the absence of fathers' in the household.
For this reason we must help fathers find the joy and delight of the experience of fatherhood. We at
PMBC are saying to our brothers in Christ Jesus, just because you went to the penitentiary, or do
not have any money, that doesn't mean that you can't be a father. We tell our brothers by picking a
little child up and holding him or her and giving them a hug and kiss, might mean more than
money or a new toy. No man has a greater gift than to give himself.
People in the community believe that the fathers are biological necessities, but social accidents. It
is clear that positive father involvement reduces child poverty and abuse. For too long, it's been
politically correct to demonize fathers and to sponsor legislation that works somewhat punitively
towards fathers. Look how fatherless ness has hurt our children. We must help fathers by teaching
them to prepare their children for the future.
The child support system is biased against men. Men work full -time at their jobs or at home, they
deserve some support too. They are also indicative of a growing number of single fathers caring
for their children. Census figures show 2.2 million men are primary caretakers for children under
age 18. That's a 62 percent increase since 1990. Many men who were paying child support cited
insensitivity to their rights and needs as fathers. For example, some mother's move to other cities
so that that father will be unable to build a relationship with that child/children. There are two
types of dads that child support agencies work with; those who are deadbeat are those who are
dead broke. Agencies are now working with fathers to revolutionize child support with referral-
based services for employment, education and substance abuse, to make sure that the entire family
is serviced. There are some fathers who don't have the resources to provide for their families.
As we at the People's Missionary Baptist Church (PMBC) continue to reach out to the
community, we at PMBC realize that fathers are an integral part of the family equation. It's really
about the children and putting them first to strengthen families.
Father's involvement must have a plan that's supports all aspects of children lives. It should
include the demand for suitable housing, basic education and establish paternity. Fathers must be
career oriented, registered voters, mindful of their culture, oppose violence of any kind, respect
towards women, respect themselves and educate their children of their history for total
empowerment.
2
"We as leaders must stand for something or die for nothing." One of our great revolutionaries
stated, "Give me liberty or give me death", it has been my experience that the only impression that
counts is the one you leave on this earth. I am 53-years old, a father with four sans and five
daughters. A. former drug dealer whose been jailed, going in and out of the institution for about 17
years, incarceration was not a wake up call for me, my wake up call carne when I started to build a
relationship with Jesus Christ who helped me change my heart and threw an anchor in my life's
path. For the past 20 years and with the help of four Pastors, Bishop Bernard Wallace, Reverend
Ralph Anthony, Reverend Oscar Anthony, and my spiritual leader and teacher Ishmael Kimbrough
Jr., I have become a very spiritual in tune. I am supporting my children in all ways-through love,
honesty, commitment and dedication. Fatherhood is a learning experience and we must support
each other.
I did not have a father in my life until I was 12 years of age when he came home from prison,
while he was in prison he learned to be anauto-mechanic. He never was able to find employment
under this skill so he was always chasing a woman and the American dream; he always lived in the
past. My mother was sent to prison when I was four years old, I did not see her until the spring of
1966 when she was released from prison. This is why I can say with all clarity I must be concerned
for my sons so they won't have to go through what I went through. Men with felony records like
my father were just thrown away. Many men such as my father found it difficult to resume their
role as a father after incarceration. But, it can be done, even if you are not living with your
children, the cycle can be broken, if you really try to get involved in your child/children lives.
AIthough you may have a criminal record, and it's going to be hard, but your children have to
come first and you must place an emphasis on education if you want them to better their future. If,
it was not for those Pastors and Jesus Christ who did not give up on me, my life would have been
wasted if I would have allowed them to have thrown me away.
This is why I say that family is the foundation on which our country was built. Our country cannot
be a strong country unless it has strong families. The family has suffered a great fall, and it can be
placed back together again if we put God and His Son Jesus Christ back in our lives; secondly we
must start by supporting our fathers and bring them back into the fold. We know that our men live
in a society where the cards have been stacked against them and now we need a system that
respects men for being men.
One of the things we at PMBC teach our fathers is that they can and should be successful as long
as they remain connected to their children, even if they become incarcerated. The perception is that
when men go to prison, they're not interested in being a father. Some of the best fathers I know are
those that were incarcerated. There is a way to stay connected and fathers are learning that children
will survive physical distance, but won't survive emotional distance. Prison is also a teachable
moment for many men, where they think about what they can do to make their lives and the lives
of their children better when they are released from prison. For this reason, men in prison start to
learn new employment skills. We must begin talking to them about ways that they can become
better fathers and develop a support system to deal with their angers and disappointments aswell
as issues surrounding their lives and just being fathers.
It has been my suggestion that we create a Center for Fathers, Families and Workforce
Development program. It is important to remember that all (risk factors) can be softened if the
children have a strong family support that includes positive influences from fathers even when
they don't reside in the home with the children. Many people will not believe that a program like
this that focuses on teaching men to be responsible fathers can work. Through racism, failed
3
government policies, anti-black stereo-types and society's ideas of what fatherhood should be are
challenging, and for this reason I won't stop. Furthermore, without fathers who are actively
engaged in the lives of their children, we are only setting ourselves up to the same old failures. For
this reason we must incorporate these difficult fathers' issues into our Gang Violence in Kern
County Strategic Plan.
I look forward to meeting with each and every member of the joint city and county task force on
this issues of papa's role can't be overlooked, dad is need too, Fathers in the Hood. If you have any
question please feel free to contact me at the above address or telephone me at home
661-831-7627.
Respectfully Submitted
Minister Wesley Crawford Sr.
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Barriers to, Employment facing Youth
Black and White Men with Criminal Records
Devah Pager
Department of Sociology
Princeton University
(606} 258-8725
pa er(~uprincetan.edu
Bruce Western
Department of Sociology
Princeton University
(6Q9}.258-2445
western(a~princeton.edu
1 This i~ a preliminary analysis that summarizes some of the main results from a larger study, l3iscrxmination irr Low
Wage Labor Markets. A more detailed report will be available later. Research for this paper was supported. by grants
from the National Foundation and the JEHT Foundation. We gratefully acknowledge the generous assistance of
Commissioner Patricia Gatling and the New York Commission on Human Rights and the contributions of Glenn Martin
and Debbie Mukamal of the National HIRE Natwork.
Note
Dear Minister Wesley Crawford. I want to thank you for alI of your work that you have done aver the years in this
subject, and your helpful telephone conversation into this study. I want to encourage you to continue to fight the good
fight with the criminal justice system and. the California Legislature. You may use this study in any form you choose to
help the plight of young men. wh.o have been incarcerated and now have criminal records. We understand their dilemma
in trying to readjust back into society.
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Barriers to Employment facing Young
Black and White Men with Criminal Records
Drivers, couriers, cleaners, fast food servers, deli. clerks; sales reps, stockers, waitstaff,
busboys, cashiers, telemarketers. We applied for them aIl. For an entire year, our guys
pounded the pavement in. search of employment through the city. These job seekers were not
your typical ex-felons. Friendly, bright, motivated, and with solid work histories, they
should have been an appealing group of candidates. And yet. each one struggled at times to
make it past the first cut. Often, once the employer had noticed. their criminal background,
their prospects for employment dwindled rapidly.
The problems of prisoner reentry are now well-known. Mass incarceration over the past
thirty years has created a steady stream of ex-offenders-more than. 600,000 per year-
leavingprison in search of work. Their experiences are rarely the source of good news. One
small study followed a group of ex-prisoners for eighteen months from their release and
reported that only a quarter had found work. Survey research shows that serving prison time
reduces employment by 10 to 25 percent. Incarceration thus has lingering effects that persist
well beyond the period of confinement, reducing employment prospects for many of those
already at the margins of the labor market.
Of course the pains of incarceration are not felt equally by all groups. Incarceration rates are
more than 7 times higher for blacks than whites. More than 10 percent of young black men
are now behind bars, 1 in 4 will enter prison. by their 30~' birthday. The racial disparity in
incarceration. can produce a double disadvantage for young black with criminal records who
are looking for work.
Some states have actively addressed. harriers to employment facing ~~x-offenders. Seekin~* to
promote employment among returning inmates, states Like New York have expanded ti~eir
Haman Rights law to include protection from discrimination for individuals with criminal
backgrounds. Employers are cautioned that they may only take a criminal background into
account if the specific crime directly related to the particular responsibilities of the job in
question. Ex-offenders in states such as New York, then, should fare well relative to the
majority of the country in which employers are free to discriminate against ex-offenders at
will.
We study job seeking among ex-offenders in New York City to see exactly how open
employers actually are to applicants with criminal backgrounds. Using an experimental audit
methodology, we sent matched pairs of individuals-called testers--to apply for real entr3;-
leveljobs throughout the city. The method allows us to control the characteristics of job
applicants. Except for a criminal record, our tester pairs present identical qualifications.
Our research suggests that ex-offenders suffer a significant penalty in the search for low-
wage employment. But beyond a general effect, it is blacks wh.o suffer tl~e greatest
disadvantage. In the following discussion, we present a mixture of quantitative and
qualitative results from our fieldwork that examines the experiences of job seekers, and the
influence of race and criminal background on their employment prospects.
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Study Design
Most research on the labor market experiences of ex-offenders contrasts pre-incarceration
pay and employment to that after release, or compares ex-offenders tonon-offenders.
Studies using these comparisons have produced. varying results, with some pointing to strong
and persistent effects of incarceration and others indicating very Little impact of incarceration
above anal beyond the characteristics of offenders themselves.
One difficulty in making sense of the research in this field is the problem of causal. inference.
Ex-offenders experience low rates of employment, but the sources of these problems remain
uncertain. It is difficult to infer a causal effect of a criminal record because many other
factors. related to incarceration-skills, motivation, interpersonal styles-may also be
reducing wages and work. While a criminal record may be a barrier to employment, it is
difficult to measure its effects directly, given so many other contributing factors.
Because of these measurement difficulties, we have turned to an experimental approach. We
adopt an audit method to study employers in New Yorlc City. The audit study uses matched.
pairs ofindividuals-called. testers-to apply for real jobs. We then record. how employers
respond. to testers with different characteristics. In this study we focus particularly on how
employers respond to minority job applicants and those with criminal records.
The study hired 13 young men to pose as our job applicants. These yom~g men staffed six
teams, with each team testing for the effect of just one job-applicant characteristic. With six
teams, we could study the effects of race, ethnicity, criminal background, and educational
attainment. Through 12 months of fielde~~ark, we audited nearly 1500 employers in New
Z'orlc City, posting nearly 3500 job applications. '['his paper focuses on four teams which
were designed to test the effect of a criminal. record. on a job applicant's success in the labor
market.
The quality of the experiment hinges en our testers. Our 13 professional job applicants were
primarily college graduates from New York City, who were matched on the basis of age,
race, physical appearance, and general style of sel#~presentation. They were assigned
fictitious matched resumes reflecting equal levels of education a.nd work experience, as well.
as comparable high schools and neighborhoods. Testers reported having completed high
school. only, and reported. steady work experience in entry-level jobs.
One tester in each two-person team also presented evidence of a felony drug conviotion.Z
This information. was often conveyed to employers by responding affirmatively to the
question asked on standard. application forms, "Have you ever been convicted of a crime?"
Testers' resumes also listed work experience in a correctional facility as a kitchen or
maintenance worker, anal listed. a parole officer as a reference. (Calls to references were
recorded. by a voice mail box). In all cases, then, the. employer was given information that
the job applicant was recently incarcerated. The c:x-offender resume was also randomly
The eriminaI record in all cases consisted of a felon}~ drug canviction (possession. with intent to distribute,
cocaine} and .18 months of (served} pz•ison time. We chose ~:o focus on a drug felony because of its prevalence,
its policy salience, and its connection to racial disparities in incarceration. It is important to acknowledge that
the effects I report here may differ depending an the type of.' offense.
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assigned to ensure that criminal record status was unrelated, on average, to any tester
characteristics.
Finally,. the testers prepared for the study with aweek-long training period, where they
learned the details of their profile (including things like what their prison experience would.
have been like, what were the current conditions of their parole, etc.) and conducted a large
number of practice interviews. The practice sessions posed the standard questions asked in
job interviews, and testers rehearsed a variety ofpre-arranged answers.
Our sample of employers came from nearly a complete listing of entry-level jobs from the
major New York newspapers. Entry-level. jobs include those requiring no more than a high
school degree and limited work experience. The job openings were randomly assigned
across teams, and we randomly varied the order in which testers applied for each job. In
addition, we drew a supplemental sample of employers from underrepresented industries
and/or neighborhoods by using targeted sampling techniques whereby testers would conduct
"walk-in" applications. Because many low-wage employers do not advertise job openings in
the newspaper, this additional sampling procedure allowed us to capture a greater range of
employer types.
Our data on employers comes from a single visit the first stage of the employment process.
Testers visited employers, filled out applications, and proceeded as far as they could during
the course of one visit. If testers were asked to interview on the spot, they did so, but they
did not return to the employer for a second visit. The primary dependent variable, then, is the
proportion of cases in which testers were offered the job on the spot, or in which the tester
was called back for an interview, which as a whole we refer to as "positive responses."
Individual voice mail boxes were set up for each tester, to record employer responses.
In addition, at the completion of each employer visit, testers filled out a 4-page response
form recording characteristics of the employer and details of their visit, including a detailed
narrative of their experience and interaction with the employer. We also look at these
records for additional insight into the differential treatment experienced by our testers.
Results
This paper focuses on the results of four person teams that test the impact of a criminal
record an black and white job seekers. We start first with an analysis of the outcomes for
white: testers, as a means of establishing a baseline criminal record effect. We then move on
to a comparison of experiences observed for black job applicants, with and without criminal
records. Overall the results demonstrate that a criminal record has serious consequences for
employment, and that these results interact with race to intensify the problems facing black
ex-offenders.
Table 1 shows the rate of~ositive responses (callbacks or job offers) received by white
testers by criminal status. White ex-offenders were three-quarters as likely to receive acall-
backxelative to equally qualified white non-offenders (16 compared to 21 percent). At the
3 Predicted probabilities are generated from a logistic regression model in which positive responses are
predicted as a function of criminal status, with controls for tester, team, sample source, and job type. Standard
errors: are corrected for clustering on employer.
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very initial stages of the application process, then, a substantial number of individuals with
criminal records are quickly eliminated from the pool under consideration.
Table 1. Probability of a Callback or Job Offer for White Annlicants by Criminal Status
Negative or No
res nse Positive Response Total
Non-offender ?9 21 100
Ex-ofTender 84 16 100
A number of experiences reported by the testers illustrate the range of employers' reactions
when confronted with ex-offenders as job applicants. In one case, Kevin, a white tester,
reports his experience at a specialty foods store:
"I noticed a sign on the door which read, `Help wanted, part time, some
experience'.... A few minutes dater a man came out.... He told me that he
had a great Part Time positions [and) there could be some full time
positions opening [inJ a while. He pointed at my response for reasons for
leaving on the application right next to [the correctional facility) and said,
`Why did you write parole? ' I said that 1 was currently on parole. [HeJ
then looked me in the eye and said, `Did you commit a crime?' 1 said yes.
He then looked down at the sheet and said that he really wasn't hiring
right now....
Kevin's conviction record seemed to catch the employer by surprise. Within seconds, the
many signals pointing to a job opportunity (help wanted sign, "great part time positions,"
etc.) disappeared, as the employer decided he was no longer hiring, or at least not hiring
Kevin.
Despite frequent unpleasant experiences, not all employers were unwilling to consider hiring
ex-offenders. In fact, on a number of occasions, white testers encountered extremely
sympathetic employers. In one instance, for example, Kevin, a white tester, records his
experience in applying for a job at a car dealership:
"He saw the correctional facility [on my resume] and said, `We're an
Equal Opportunity Employer. We don't care about this. About 75% of the
people in this business have record anyway.... "'
Kevin describes the end of the interview:
"He said he was going to call me. Then he said, `I know what you are
thinking. This asshole is never going to call me. I will call you. Not
because you have good sales experience but just because you need a
chance. "'
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This experience demonstrates an employer who is extremely sympathetic to the plight of an
ex-offender looking for work. In fact, the employer appears willing to privilege the desire to
give Kevin a second chance over his need for workers with relevant experience. Indeed, this
employer called Kevin about the job two days later.
At another car dealership, Simon, also a white tester, records the following interaction:
"You were mixed up in some bullshit? " Yes, I safd, but I'm just focusing
on the future and trying to move on. "Well I'm a guy that likes to give
second chances. "
Again, the employer offers reassuring remarks to the job applicant, emphasizing the value of
"second chances," and the desire to help guys like Simon get back on their feet.
Keith, another white tester, encountered a similar sentiment from the manager at a furniture
rental store. He describes the manager's comment at the end of the interview: "My
inclination is to say yes" (regarding hiring me). He added, "My bosses, the owners, are a
little more close-minded than me...Look, you paid, you don't have to pay for it the rest of
your fucking life. People make mistakes. I'll get you my card. "
In another interview, a restaurant manager who appears more concerned. with Kevin's well-
being-than with any concerns about his criminal past:
He then asked if I would like a job in the front of the house and would 1 be
comfarable with it. I said 1 would. He then asked, "Would your parole
officer cure if you worked here? " I wasn 't sure what he meant and then
he explained further. "This is the type of place where I really shouldn't
be telling you this but-this is the type of restaurant where lots of drug
deals are going on... [SoJwould he mind if you worked here? " I said I
would be fine with it. He said, "I know that you would be fine with it, but
will he? " I said yes. He said "OK I will have someone call you."
While a criminal record. does have a significant negative impact on the employment
prospects of white job seekers, many employers are willing to look beyond the conviction
and. to emphasize the importance of "second chances." At least among those employers who
take the time to talk with the job applicant, a kind of empathy often develops between
employer and job seeker, and this goodwill can translate into a substantial improvement in
employment prospects.
Is it Harder for Black Eg-Offenders to Find Work?
White ex-offenders encountered rejection and sympathy, but the reaction to black ex-
offenders was more often negative. Figure 1 contrasts results for black and white job
seekers. The criminal record gap is larger for blacks than whites. Black job seekers just out of
prison are much less likely to receive a job offer or callback from an employer than a black
job seeker with no criminal record (6 compared to 16 percent}. While white ex-offenders
were three-quarters as likely to receive a callback or job offer than comparable white non-
offenders, black ex-offenders were only a third. as likely to receive consideration compared to
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black non-offenders. The large criminal-record gap for blacks suggests that race and
criminal status interact to intensify the stigma of official criminality.
Figure 1. The Effect of a Criminal Record for
Black and White Job Applicants
30
u
~ zo
a
is
8
io
s
0
Blade White
~ Criminal Record (HS)
^ No Record
21
16 16
6
....~~
Several testers' experiences illustrate the strong reactions from employers. Following one
interview, Dathan, an African American tester, reports the following experience:
"I gave Jennifer my resume, and she started stuttering, blinking her eyes,
at a complete loss for words for about 3 long seconds, as if something on
my resume had an electric shock cable attached to it.... "
In another case, Anthony, also a black tester, describes the change in reception he perceives
once his criminal record is noticed:
"She told me to hold on a second while she went to get someone [to
interview) me. As she walked away she looked over my resume. She must
have walked no more than 20 feet before she [stopped), turned around
and said, `Thank you. I'll pass this along. ' I can only assume that it was
a result of my conviction. "
We do not know exactly why the employer declined to interview Anthony, but experiences
Iike these were not uncommon. Black testers often reported noticing discomfort on the part
of employers once they noticed the record. Employers also appeared less willing to discuss
the record openly with black testers, and were less likely to use the language of "second
chances," a phrase that came up numerous times with the white testers. Though some
employers expressed sympathy for the black ex-offenders (see below), most were less likely
to want to discuss the black testers' conviction, or to give them a chance to explain. Rather,
in mast cases, the criminal conviction was an immediate disqualifier.
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Employers' Own Experiences
White ex-offenders often seemed able to elicit empathy from employers in ways that black
ex-offenders found difficult. A number of employers made comments to the white testers
explicitly acknowledging their identification with the young white men ("When I was your
age... " or "We've all made our mistakes "). In conversations with black testers, these
comments were less often observed. Racial identification appeared to provide an immediate
basis for solidazity, and employers seemed to feel comfortable with a white kid who had
made a big mistake but was working to move on.
For a particular group of employers, though, empathy grew from a different (or additional)
source. Employers who had themselves had contact with. the criminal justice system, or who
knew others that had, were much more willing to see a prior conviction as an opportunity for
self-improvement than an immediate disqualifier.
Here Keith, a white tester, reports his experience applying for a restaurant job:
"What were you arrested for? " Drug felotry. "Ahhh, I have a couple
friends that served time, paid their debt to society. " He was very
sympathetic toward me and kept saying things about having paid my debt
and being able to move on. He said he has a friend who was arrested and
got 18 years for drugs.... "Oh, but you have your whole life ahead. " He
told me he had been arrested for a felonry assault; he didn't say if he had
served arty time, but seemed comfortable about the subject.... He repeated
the thing about paying your debt and said his friend that served 18 years
now awns a real successful trucking comparry. He said he liked me and
wanted to give me a shot. "Just come back tomorrow and talk to Kenny. "
In another case, Travis finds an empathetic employer who shares his own experience:
"What were you in prison for? " I said a drug possession. He said, "Cool
man. Drugs at°e cool. Seriously, that's not gonna matter to us. We've all
been through that sort of thing. I was on parole for four years. 1 know
what it's like. "
An employer at a local restaurant reassured Simon about his conviction: "Don't worry, I'm
familiar with some of the things on here [the criminal record] and you don't have to worry.
Everyone is human, everyone gets a fair shot. "Likewise, Doug encountered an employer
who commented that he "had people working far him who had done much worse. "These
employers were comfortable with the issue of prior convictions, either through personal
experience or through prior employees. This familiarity created a comfort level, and a
willingness to Look beyond the broad category of "offender" to evaluate the specific qualities
of the candidate.
Black testers also found receptive employers among those with relevant prior experiences.
Anthony reports the following interaction:
[After telling the employer (an African American woman) about the
conviction, she said:] "Don't worry, I just want to hear straight up what
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happened. We hired someone who was in jail for 6 years and he worked
out fine before he went on to do other things. He still comes by to thank us
forgiving him a chance. "
Likewise, Zuri recorded the following interaction with an employer for a janitorial staffing
company:
"If you don 't mind my asking, what were you incarcerated for? " ~Zuri
explained the circumstances of the crime. The employer then went on to
describe his own history with the police, the result of a housing dispute.)
The cops came to where he was, read him his rights and put the cuffs on
him. "It was terrible, " he said, "how they throw you in a cage and you
have to get on a bus with everybody else and spend your time in a cell
while you're trying to prove your case. " He didn't go into too marry
details, but she said he just wanted to put it behind him too. "I've been to
jail and I know just because something went wrong and you've been inside
doesn't mean you have horns on your head. "
Thus blacks also benefited from employers' prior experiences working with ex-offenders, or
from their own. contact with the criminal justice system. This familiarity helped employers to
view the applicants as individuals with potential, rather than writing them. off for a single
offense. Unfortunately, these employers were not sufficiently prevalent to significantly
improve the employment prospects of black ex-offenders overall. While a few cases
illustrate positive interactions, the vast majority of employers appeared immediately
uncomfortable with black ex-offenders, and unlikely to want to learn more.
Conclusion
The results of this study suggest that, even in New York, a state with explicit legal
protections for ex-offenders, employers remain reluctant to hire applicants with criminal
records. These effects are particularly pronounced in the case of black ex-offenders. While
white ex-offenders were often given the benefit of the doubt-or encouraged with reference
to "second chances"-black ex-offenders were less often given the opportunity to discuss the
context of their past or to demonstrate their commitment to desistance in the present and
future.
Analyzing the content of testers' interactions with employers, we identified several. factors
that appear to promote empathy between employers and ex-offenders. Employers who had
themselves had previous contact with the criminal justice system, or who had experiences
with ex-offenders as employees, appeared far more sympathetic to the plight of these job
applicants.
Overall these findings emphasize the importance of considering race in discussions of
prisoner reentry. While all ex-offenders face certain common barriers to employment,
minority status compounds these initial disadvantages and alters the opportunities available
far "going straight." In the context of growing racial disparities in incarceration,
understanding the racial. dimensions of prisoner reentry becomes all the more important.
The Mark of a Criminal Records
Devah Pager
Northwestern University
With over 2 million individuals currently incarcerated, and over
half a million prisoners released each year, the large and growing
number of men being processed through the criminal justice system
raises important questions about the consequences of this massive
institutional intervention. This article focuses on the consequences
of incarceration for the employment outcomes of black and white
job seekers. The present study adopts an experimental audit
approach-in which matched pairs of individuals applied for real
entry-level jobs-to formally test the degree to which a criminal re-
cord affects subsequent employment opportunities. The findings of
this study reveal an, important, and much underrecognized, mech-
anism of stratification. A criminal record presents a major bamer
to employment, with important implications for racial disparities.
While stratification researchers typically focus on schools, labor markets,
and the family as primary institutions affecting inequality, a new insti-
tution has emerged as central to the sorting and stratifying of young and
disadvantaged men: the criminal justice system. With over 2 million in-
dividuals currently incarcerated, and over half a million prisoners released
each year, the large and growing numbers of men being processed through
the criminal justice system raises important questions about the conse-
quences of this massive institutional intervention.
This article focuses on the consequences of incarceration for the em-
' Support for this research includes grants from the National Science Foundation (SES-
0101236), the National Institute of Justice (2002-]J-CX-0002), the Joyce Foundation,
and the Soros Foundation. Views expressed in this document are my own and do not
necessarily represent those of the granting agencies. I am grateful for comments and
suggestions from Marc Bendick, Jr., Robert M. Hauser, Erik Olin Wright, Lincoln
Quillian, David B. Grusky, Eric Grodsky, Chet Pager, Irving Piliavin, Jeremy Freese,
and Bruce Western. This research would not have been possible without the support
and hospitality of the staff at the Benedict Center and at the Department of Sociology
at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Direct correspondence to Devah Pager,
Department of Sociology, Northwestern University, 1810 Chicago Avenue, Evanston,
Illinois 60208. E-mail: pager@northwestern.edu
®2003 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
0002-960212003/10805-0001$10.00
AJS Volume 108 Number 5 (March 2003): 937-75 937
American Journal of Sociology
ployment outcomes of black and white men. While previous survey re-
seazch has demonstrated a strong association between incarceration and
employment, there remains little understanding of the mechanisms by
which these outcomes are produced. In the present study, I adopt an
experimental audit approach to formally test the degree to which a crim-
inal record affects subsequent employment opportunities. By using
matched pairs of individuals to apply for real entry-level jobs, it becomes
possible to directly measure the extent to which a criminal record-in the
absence of other disqualifying characteristics-serves as a barrier to em-
ployment among equally qualified applicants. Further, by varying the
race of the tester pairs, we can assess the ways in which the effects of
race and criminal record interact to produce new forms of labor market
inequalities.
TRENDS IN INCARCERATION
Over the past three decades, the number of prison inmates in the United
States has increased by more than 600%, Ieaving it the country with the
highest incarceration rate in the world (Bureau of Justice Statistics 2002a;
Barclay, Tavares, and Siddique 2001). During this time, incarceration has
changed from a punishment reserved primarily for the most heinous of-
fenders to one extended to a much greater range of crimes and a much
lazger segment of the population. Recent trends in crime policy have led
to the imposition of harsher sentences for a wider range of offenses, thus
casting an ever-widening net of penal intervention.'
While the recent "tough on crime" policies may be effective in getting
criminals off the streets, little provision has been made for when they get
back out. Of the nearly 2 million individuals currently incarcerated,
roughly 95% will be released, with more than half a million being released
each year (Slevin 2000). According to one estimate, there are currently
over 12 million ex-felons in the United States, representing roughly S%
of the working-age population (Uggen, Thompson, and Mama 2000). Of
those recently released, nearly two-thirds will be charged with new crimes
and over 40% will return to prison within three years (Bureau of Justice
Statistics 2000). Certainly some of these outcomes are the result of desolate
opportunities or deeply ingrained dispositions, grown out of broken fam-
For example, the recent adoption of mandatory sentencing laws, most often used for
drug offenses, removes discretion from the sentencing judge to consider the range of
factors pertaining to the individual and the offense that would normally be taken into
account. As a result, the chances of receiving a state prison term after being arrested
for a drug offense rose by 547% between 1980 and 1992 (Bureau of Justice Statistics
1995).
938
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flies, poor neighborhoods, and little social control (Sampson and Laub
1993; Wilson 1997). But net of these contributing factors, there is evidence
that experience with the criminal justice system in itself has adverse con-
sequences for subsequent opportunities. In particular, incarceration is as-
sociated with limited future employment opportunities and earnings po-
tential (Freeman 1987; Western 2002), which themselves are among the
strongest predictors of recidivism (Shover 1996; Sampson and Laub 1993;
Uggen 2000).
The expansion of the prison population has been particularly conse-
quential for blacks. The incarceration rate for young black men in the
year 2000 was nearly 10%, compared to just over 1% for white men in
the same age group (Bureau of Justice Statistics 2001). Young black men
today have a 28% likelihood of incarceration during their lifetime (Bureau
of Justice Statistics 1997), a figure that rises above 50% among young
black high school dropouts (Pettit and Western 2001). These vast numbers
of inmates translate into a large and increasing population of black ex-
offenders returning to communities and searching for work. The barriers
these men face in reaching economic self-sufficiency are compounded by
the stigma of minority status and criminal record. The consequences of
such trends for widening racial disparities are potentially profound (see
Western and Pettit 1999; Freeman and Holzer 1986).
PRIOR RESEARCH
While little research to date has focused on the consequences of crimina]
sanctions, a small and growing body of evidence suggests that contact
with the criminal justice system can Iead to a substantial reduction in
economic opportunities. Using longitudinal survey data, researchers have
studied the employment probabilities and income of individuals after
release from prison and have found a strong and consistent negative effect
of incarceration (Western and Beckett 1999; Freeman 1987; Nagin and
Waldfogel 1993).
This existing research has been instrumental in demonstrating the pos-
sible aggregate effects of incarceration on labor market outcomes. Un-
fortunately, however, there are several fundamental limitations of survey
data that leave the conclusions of this research vulnerable to harsh crit-
icism. First, it is difficult, using survey data, to rule out the possibility
that unmeasured differences between those who are and are not convicted
of crimes may drive the observed results. Figure 1 presents one possible
model of the relationship between incarceration and employment out-
comes, with a direct causal link between the two. In this model, an in-
dividual acquires a criminal record, which then severely limits his later
939
American Journal of Sociology
incarceration --- Employment
outcomes
Fic. 1.-Model of direct causation
employment opportunities. But what evidence can we offer in support of
this causal relationship? We know that the population of inmates is not
a random sample of the overall population. What if, then, the poor out
comes of ex-offenders are merely the result of preexisting traits that make
these men bad employees in the first place? Figure 2 presents a model of
spurious association in which there is no direct link between incarceration
and employment outcomes. Instead, there are direct links between various
preexisting individual characteristics (e.g., drug and alcohol abuse, be-
havioralproblems, poor interpersonal skills), which increase the likelihood
of both incarceration and poor employment outcomes.' In this model, the
association between incarceration and employment is entirely spuri-
ous-the result of individual predispositions toward deviance.
Consistent with figure 2, Kling (1999), Grogger (1995), and Needels
(1996) have each argued that the effect of incarceration on employment
is negligible, at an estimated 0%-4%. Using administrative data from
unemployment insurance (UI) files matched with records from various
state departments of corrections, these authors contend that the observed
association is instead largely determined by unmeasured individual char-
acteristics:` The findings of these authors stand in stark contrast to the
majority of literature asserting a strong link between incarceration and
employment (Western and Beckett 1999; Bushway 1998; Sampson and
Laub 1993; Freeman 1987; Grogger 1992). While it remains an -open
question as to whether and to what extent incarceration causes employ-
' The variables listed here are just a few of the many potential sources of spuriousness
that are virtually untestable using survey data.
`Studies using administrative data have the advantage of analyzing large samples of
ex-offenders over extended periods of time, before and after incarceration. However,
this line of research also suffers from several important limitations: First, employment
and wage data from UI administrative records are available only for those jobs covered
by and in compliance with unemployment insurance laws, thus excluding many tem-
porary, contingent, or "grey-market" jobs, which may be more likely held by ex-of-
fenders. Second, administrative data are typically limited to one state or jurisdiction;
individuals who move to other states during the period of observation aze thus mis-
takenly coded as unemployed or as zero-eazners. And finally, missing social security
numbers or difficulties in matching records often results in fairly substantial reduction
in sample representativeness. See Kornfeld and Bloom (1999) for an in-depth discussion
of these issues.
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incarceration
alcohol/drug abuse
sehavioral problems
Poor interpersonal skill
Employment
outcomes
Ftc. 2.-Model of spurious effects
ment difficulties, survey research is poorly equipped to offer a definitive
answer. The .Achilles heel of the survey methodology is its inability to
escape from the glaring problems of selection that plague research in this
Geld (see Winship and Morgan 1999; Rubin 1990; Heckman et al. 1998) s
A second, related limitation of survey research is its inability to formally
identify mechanisms. From aggregate effects, we can infer plausible causal
processes, but these are only indirectly supported by the data. Because
numerous mechanisms could lead to the same set of outcomes, we are
left unable to assess the substantive contribution of any given causal
process. Survey researchers have offered numerous hypotheses regarding
the mechanisms that may produce the observed relationship between in-
carceration and employment. These include the labeling effects of criminal
stigma (Schwartz and Skolnick 1962), the disruption of social and familial
ties (Sampson and Laub 1993), the influence on social networks (Hagan
1993), the loss of human capital (Becker 1975), institutional trauma (Par-
enti 1999), legal barriers to employment (Dale 1976), and, of course, the
possibility that incarceration effects may be entirely spurious (Kling 1999;
Grogger 1995; Needels 1996). Without direct measures of these variables,
it is difficult, using survey data, to discern which, if any, of these causal
explanations may be at work.
The uncertainty surrounding these mechanisms motivates the current
project. Before addressing some of the larger consequences of incarcer-
s Researchers have employed creative techniques for addressing these issues, such as
looking at pre- and postincarceration outcomes for the same individuals (e.g., Grogger
1992; Freeman 1991), comparing ex-offenders to future offenders (e.g., Waldfogel 1994;
Grogger 1995), estimating fixed- and random-effects models (Western 2002), and using
instrumental variables approaches to correct for unmeasured heterogeneity (e.g., Free-
man 1994). There remains little consensus, however, over the degree to which these
techniques effectively account for the problems of selection endemic to this type of
research.
941
American Journal of Sociology
ation, it is essential to first establish conclusively the mechanism-or at
least one of the mechanisms-driving these results. In the present study,
I focus on the effect of a criminal record on employment opportunities.
This emphasis directs our attention to the stigma associated with criminal
justice intervention and to the ways in which employers respond to this
stigma in considering applicants. While certainly there are additional ways
in which incarceration may affect subsequent employment, this focus
allows us to separate the institutional effect from the individual (or fmm
the interaction of the two) and to directly assess one of the most widely
discussed-but rarely measured-mechanisms of carceral channeling
(Wacquant 2000). While incarceration may in fact additionally transform
individuals (and/or their social ties) in ways that make them less suited
to work, my interest here is in what might be termed the "credentialing"
aspect of the criminal justice system. Those sent to prison are institu-
tionally branded as a particular class of individuals-as are college grad-
uates or welfare recipients-with implications for their perceived place
in the stratification order. The "negative credential" associated with a
criminal record represents a unique mechanism of stratification, in that
it is the state that certifies particular individuals in ways that qualify them
for discrimination or social exclusion.b It is this official status of the neg-
ative credential that differentiates it from other sources of social stigma,
offering greater legitimacy to its use as the basis for differentiation. (See
Pager [2002] for a more extensive discussion of negative credentials and
their implications for stratification).
In order to investigate this question, I have chosen an experimental
approach to the problem, a methodology best suited to isolating causal
mechanisms. There have, in the past, been a limited number of studies
that have adopted an experimental approach to the study of criminal
stigma. These studies have relied on a "correspondence test" approach,
whereby applications 'are submitted by mail with no in-person contact.
The most notable in this line of research is a classic study by Schwartz
and Skolnick (1962) in which the-researchers prepared four sets of resumes
to be sent to prospective employers, varying the criminal record of ap-
plicants. In each condition, employers were less likely to consider appli-
`Numerous opportunities become formally off-limits to individuals following a felony
conviction, including (depending on the state of residence) access to public housing,
voting rights, and employment in certain occupational sectors (e.g., health care oc-
cupations, public sector positions, child and elder care work). In addition, the wide-
spread availability of criminal background information allows for the information to
be further used as the basis for allocating opportunities not formally off-limits to ex-
offenders, as studied here.
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cants who had any prior contact with the criminal justice system.' Several
later studies have verified these findings, varying the types of crimes
committed by the hypothetical applicant (Finn and Fontaine 1985; Cohen
and Nisbett 1997) or the national context (Boshier and Johnson 1974;
Buikhuisen and Dijksterhuis 1971}. Each of these studies reports the sim-
ilaz finding that, all else equal, contact with the criminal justice system
leads to worse employment opportunities.
Unfortunately, the research design of Schwartz and Skolnick and others
using this approach has several limitations. First, Schwartz and Skolnick's
study, while clearly demonstrating the substantial effect of criminal
stigma, is limited to one job type only (an unskilled hotel job). It remains
uncertain how these effects generalize to the overall population of entry-
level jobs. Ex-offenders face a diverse set of job openings, some of which
may be more or less restricted to applicants with criminal records..
Second, correspondence tests are poorly equipped to address the issue
of race. While it is possible to designate national origin using ethnic names
(see, e.g., Riach and Rich 1991), it is much more difficult to clearly dis-
tinguish black and white applicants on paper.8 Given the high rates of
incarceration among blacks and the pervasive media images of black
criminals, there is good reason to suspect that employers may respond
differently to applicants with criminal records depending on their race
(see discussion below). Prior research using correspondence tests to study
the effect of criminal records, however, has not attempted to include race
as a variable.
Finally, the type of application procedure used in correspondence
tests-sending resumes by mail-is typically reserved for studies of ad-
ministrative, clerical, and higher-level occupations. The types of job open-
ings ex-offenders are most likely to apply for, by contrast, typically request
in-person applications, and a mailed resume would therefore appear out
of place.
The present study extends the work of Schwartz and Skolnick to include
a more comprehensive assessment of the hiring process of ex-offenders
across a full range of entry-level employment. By using an experimental
audit design, this study effectively isolates the effect of a criminal record,
while observing employer behavior in real-life employment settings. Fur-
' The four conditions included (1) an applicant who had been convicted and sentenced
for assault, (2) an applicant who had been tried for assault but acquitted, (3} an
applicant who had been tried for assault, acquitted, and had a letter from the judge
certifying the applicant's acquittal and emphasizing the presumption of innocence,
and (4) an applicant who had no criminal record. In all three criminal conditions--even
with a letter from the judge-applicants were less likely to be considered by employers
relative to the noncriminal control.
° For an excellent exception, see Bertrand and Mullainathan (2002).
943
American Journal of Sociology
ther, by using in-person application procedures, it becomes possible to
simulate the process most often followed for entry-level positions, as well
as to provide a more direct test of the effects of race on hiring outcomes.
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
There are three primary questions I seek to address with the present study.
First, in discussing the main effect of a criminal record, we need to ask
whether and to what extent employers use information about criminal
histories to make hiring decisions. Implicit in the criticism of survey re-
search in this area is the assumption that the signal of a criminal record
is not a determining factor. Rather, employers use information about the
interactional styles of applicants, or other observed characteristics-which
maybe correlated with criminal records-and this explains the differential
outcomes we observe. In this view, a criminal record does not represent
a meaningful signal to employers on its own. This study formally tests
the degree to which employers use information about criminal histories
in the absence of corroborating evidence. It is essential that we conclu-
sively document this effect before making larger claims about the aggre-
gate consequences of incarceration.
Second, this study investigates the extent to which race continues to
serve as a major barrier to employment. While race has undoubtedly
played a central role in shaping the employment opportunities of African-
Americans over the past century, recent arguments have questioned the
continuing significance of race, arguing instead that other factors-such
as spatial location, soft skills, social capital, or cognitive ability-can
explain most or all of the contemporary racial differentials we observe
(Wilson 1987; Moss and Tilly 1996; Loury 1977; Neal and Johnson 1996).
This study provides a comparison of the experiences of equally qualified
black and white applicants, allowing us to assess the extent to which
direct racial discrimination persists in employment interactions.
The third objective of this study is to assess whether the effect of a
criminal record differs for black and white applicants. Most reseazch
investigating the differential impact of incarceration on blacks has focused
on the differential rates of incarceration and how those rates translate
into widening racial disparities. In addition to disparities in the rate of
incarceration, however, it is also important to consider possible racial
differences in the effects of incarceration. Almost none of the existing
literature to date has explored this issue, and the theoretical arguments
remain divided as to what we might expect.
On one hand, there is reason to believe that the signal of a criminal
record should be less consequential for blacks. Research on racial stere-
944
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otypes tells us that Americans hold strong and persistent negative ster-
eotypes about blacks, with one of the most readily invoked contemporary
stereotypes relating to perceptions of violent and criminal dispositions
(Smith 1991; Sniderman and Piazza 1993; Devine and Elliott 1995). If it
is the case that employers view all blacks as potential criminals, they are
likely to differentiate less among those with official criminal records and
those without. Actual confirmation of criminal involvement then will pro-
vide only redundant information, while evidence against it will be dis-
counted. In this case, the outcomes for all blacks should be worse, with
less differentiation between those with criminal records and those without.
On the other hand, the effect of a criminal record may be worse for
blacks if employers, already wary of black applicants, are more hesitant
when it comes to taking risks on blacks with proven criminal tendencies.
The literature on racial stereotypes also tells us that stereotypes are most
likely to be activated and reinforced when a target matches on more than
one dimension of the stereotype (Quillian and Pager 2002; Darley and
Gross 1983; Fiske and Neuberg 1990). While employers may have learned
to keep their racial attributions in check through years of heightened
sensitivity around employment discrimination, when combined with
knowledge of a criminal history, negative attributions are likely to
intensify.
A third possibility, of course, is that a criminal record affects black and
white applicants equally. The results of this audit study will help to ad-
judicate between these competing predictions.
THE AUDIT METHODOLOGY
The method of audit studies was pioneered in the 1970s with a series of
housing audits conducted by the Department of Housing and Urban De-
velopment (Wienk et al. 1979; Hakken 1979). Nearly 20 years later, this
initial model was modified and applied to the employment context by
researchers at the Urban Institute (Cross et al. 1990; ZLrner, Fix, and
Struyk 1991). The basic design of an employment audit involves sending
matched pairs of individuals (called testers) to apply for real job openings
in order to see whether employers respond differently to applicants on
the basis of selected characteristics.
The appeal of the audit methodology lies in its ability to combine
experimental methods with real-life contexts. This combination allows for
greater generalizability than a lab experiment and a better grasp of the
causal mechanisms than what we can normally obtain from observational
data. The audit methodology is particularly valuable for those with an
interest in discrimination. Typically, researchers are forced to infer dis-
945
American Journal of Sociology
crimination indirectly, often attributing the residual from a statistical
model-which is essentially all that is not directly explained-to discrim-
ination. This convention is rather unsatisfying to researchers who seek
empirical documentation for important social processes. The audit meth-
odology therefore provides a valuable tool for this research.9
Audit studies have primarily been used to study those characteristics
protected under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, such as race, gender,
and age (Ayres and Siegelman 1995; Cross et al. 1990; Turner et al. 1991;
Bendick, Brown, and Wall 1999; Bendick 1999; Bendick, Jackson, and
Reinoso 1994; Neumark 1996). The employment of ex-offenders, of course,
has not traditionally been thought of as a civil rights issue, but with the
rapid expansion of the criminal justice system over the past three decades,
there has been heightened concern over the growing population of men
with criminal records. Recognizing the increasing importance of this issue,
several states (including Wisconsin) have passed legislation expanding the
fair employment regulations to protect individuals with criminal records
from discrimination by employers. Employers are cautioned that crimes
may only be considered if they closely relate to the specific duties required
of the job, however "shocking" the crime may have been. ff anything,
then, this study represents a strong test of the effect of a criminal record.
We might expect the effect to be larger in states where no such legal
protection is in place.10
STUDY DESIGN
The basic design of this study involves the use of four male auditors (also
called testers), two blacks and two whites. The testers were paired by
race; that is, unlike in the original Urban Institute audit studies, the two
black testers formed one team, and the two white testers formed the second
"While the findings from audit studies have produced some of the most convincing
evidence of discrimination available from social science research, there aze specific
criticisms of this approach that warrant consideration. Heckman and Siegelman (1993)
identify five major threats to the validity of results from audit studies: (1.) prohlems
in effective matching, (2) the use of "overqualified" testers, (3) limited sampling frame
for the selection of firms and jobs to be audited, (4) experimenter effects, and (5) the
ethics of audit research. For a useful discussion of these concerns, see the series of
essays published in Fix and Struyk (1993). See also app. A below.
40 Indeed, in a survey of employer attitudes, Holzer, Raphael, and Stoll (2002) found
that Milwaukee employers were significantly more likely to consider hiring ex-offenders
than were employers in Boston, Atlanta, Los Angeles, or Detroit, suggesting that
Wisconsin may represent a best case scenario for the employment outcomes of ex-
offenders relative to other major metropolitan areas (see also Holzer and Stoll 2001).
946
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team (see fig. 3)." The testers were 23-year-old college students from
Milwaukee who were matched on the basis of physical appearance a~
general style of self-presentation. Objective characteristics that were not
already identical between pairs-such as educational attainment a,nd
work experience-were made similar for the purpose of the applications.
Within each team, one auditor was randomly assigned a "criminal record"
for the first week; the pair then rotated which member presented himself
as the ex-offender for each successive week of employment searches, such
that each tester served in the criminal record condition for an equal num-
ber of cases. By varying which member of the pair presented himself as
having a criminal record, unobserved differences within the pairs of ap-
plicants were effectively controlled. No significant differences were found
for the outcomes of individual testers or by month of testing.
Job openings for entry-level positions (defined as jobs requiring no
previous experience and no education greater than high school} were
identified from the Sunday classified advertisement section of the Mil-
waukee Journal Sentinel.12 In addition, a supplemental sample was drawn
from Jobnet, astate-sponsored web site for employment listings, which
was developed in connection with the W-2 Welfare-to-Work initiatives.13
The audit pairs were randomly assigned 15 job openings each week.
The white pair and the black pair were assigned separate sets of jobs,
with the same-race testers applying to the same jobs. One member of the
pair applied first, with the second applying one day later (randomly var-
ying whether the ex-offender was first or second). A total of 350 employers
were audited during the course of this study: 150 by the white pair and
Z00 by the black pair. Additional tests were performed by the black pair
because black testers received fewer callbacks on average, and there were
thus fewer data points with which to draw comparisons. A larger sample
"The primary goal of this study was to measure the effect of a criminal record, and
thus it was important for this characteristic to be measured as a within-pair effect.
While it would have been ideal for all four testers to have visited the same employers,
this likely would have aroused suspicion. The testers were thus divided into separate
teams by race and assigned to two randomly selected sets of employers.
"Occupations with legal restrictions on ex-offenders were excluded from the sample.
These include jobs in the health care industry, work with children and the elderly,
jobs requiring the handling of firearms (i.e., security guazds), and jobs in the public
sector. An estimate of the collateral consequences of incarceration would also need to
take account of the wide range of employment formally off-limits to individuals with
prior felony convictions.
"Employment services like Jobnet have become a much more common method of
finding employment in recent years, particulazly for difficult-to-employ populations
such as welfare recipients and ex-offenders. Likewise, a recent survey by Holzer and
Stoll (2001) found that nearly half of Milwaukee employers {46%) use Jobnet to ad-
vertise vacancies in their companies.
947
American Journal of Sociology
White Black
C N C N
150 audits 200 audits
Ftc. 3.-Audit design: "C" refers to criminal record; "N" refers to no criminal record
size enables me to calculate more precise estimates of the effects under
investigation.
Immediately following the completion of each job application, testers
filled out asix-page response form that coded relevant information from
the test. Important variables included type of occupation, metropolitan
status, wage, size of establishment, and race and sex of employer." Ad-
ditionally, testers wrote narratives describing the overall interaction and
any comments made by employers (or included on applications) specifi-
cally related to race or criminal records.
One key feature of this audit study is that it focuses only on the first
stage of the employment process. Testers visited employers, filled out
applications, and proceeded as far as they could during the course of one
visit. If testers were asked to interview on the spot, they did so, but they
did not return to the employer for a second visit. The primary dependent
vaziable, then, is the proportion of applications that elicited callbacks
from employers. Individual voicemail boxes were set up for each tester
to record employer responses. If a tester was offered the job on the spot,
this was also coded as a positive response.15 The reason I chose to focus
only on this initial stage of the employment process is because this is the
stage likely to be most affected by the barrier of a criminal record. In an
audit study of age discrimination, for example, Bendick et al. (1999) found
that 76% of the measured differential treatment occurred at this initial
stage of the employment process. Given that a criminal record, like age,
"See Pager (2002) for a discussion of the variation across each of these dimensions.
"In cases where testers were offered jobs on the spot, they were instructed to tell the
employer that they were still waiting to hear back from another job they had inter-
viewed for earlier. The tester then called the employer back at the end of the same
day to let him or her know that the other job had come. through and he was therefore
no longer available.
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is a highly salient characteristic, it is likely that as much, if not more, of
the treatment effect will be detected at this stage.
TESTER PROFILES
In developing the tester profiles, emphasis was placed on adopting char-
acteristics that were both numerically representative and substantively
important. In the present study, the criminal record consisted of a felony
drug conviction (possession with intent to distribute, cocaine) and 18
months of (served) prison time. A drug crime (as opposed to a violent or
property crime) was chosen because of its prevalence, its policy salience,
and its connection to racial disparities in incarceration.'6 It is important
to acknowledge that the effects reported here may differ depending on
the type of offense."
In assigning the educational and work history of testers, I sought a
compromise between representing the modal group of offenders, while
also providing some room for variation in the outcome of the audits. Most
audit studies of employment have created tester profiles that include some
college experience, so that testers will be highly competitive applicants
for entry-level jobs and so that the contrast between treatment and control
group is made clear (see app. B in Cross et al. 1989). In the present study,
however, postsecondary schooling experience would detract from the rep-
resentativeness of the results. More than 70% of federal and nearly 90%
of state prisoners have no more than a high school degree (or equivalent).
"Over the past two decades, drug crimes were the fastest growing class of offenses.
In 1980, roughly one out of every 16 state inmates was incarcerated for a drug crime;
by 1999, this figure had jumped to one out of every five (Bureau of justice Statistics
2000). In federal prisons, nearly three out of every five inmates are incarcerated for a
drug crime (Bureau of Justice Statistics 2001). A significant portion of this increase
can be attributed to changing policies concerning drug enforcement. By 2000, every
state in the country had adopted some form of truth in sentencing laws, which impose
mandatory sentencing minimums for a range of offenses. These laws have been applied
most frequently to drug crimes, leading to more than a fivefold rise in the number of
drug arrests that result in incarceration and a doubling of the average length of sen-
tences for drug convictions (Mauer 1999; Blumstein and Beck 1999). While the steep
rise in drug enforcement has been felt across the population, this "war on drugs° has
had a disproportionate impact on African-Americans. Between 1990 and 1997, the
number of black inmates serving time for drug offenses increased by 60%, compared
to a 46% increase in the number of whites (Bureau of Justice Statistics 1995). In 1999,
26% of all black state inmates were incarcerated for drug offenses, relative to less than
half that proportion of whites (Bureau of Justice Statistics 2001).
"Survey results indicate that employers are substantially more averse to applicants
convicted of violent crimes or property crimes relative to those convicted of drug
crimes (Holzer et al. 2002; Pager 2002).
949
American Journal of Sociology
The education level of testers in this study, therefore, was chosen to rep-
resent the modal category of offenders (high school diploma).18
There is little systematic evidence concerning the work histories of
inmates prior to incarceration. Overall, 77.4% of federal and 67.4% of
state inmates were employed prior to incarceration (Bureau of Justice
Statistics 1994). There is, however, a substantial degree of heterogeneity
in the quality and consistency of work experience during this time (Pager
2001). In the present study, testers were assigned favorable work histories
in that they report steady work experience in entry-level jobs and nearly
continual employment (until incarceration). In the job prior to incarcer-
ation (and, for the control group, prior to the last short-term job), testers
report having worked their way from an entry-level position to a super-
visory role.19
DESIGN ISSUES
There are a number of complexities involved in the design and imple-
mentation of an audit study.20 Apart from the standard complications of
carrying out a field experiment, there were several specific dilemmas posed
in the development of the current study that required substantial delib-
eration. First, in standard audit studies of race or gender, it is possible to
construct work histories for test partners in such a way that the amount
of work experience reported by each tester is identical. By contrast, the
present study compares the outcome of one applicant who has spent 18
months in prison. It was therefore necessary to manipulate the work
histories of both applicants so that this labor market absence did not bias
the results.21 The solution opted for here was for the ex-offender to report
six months of work experience gained while in prison (preceded by 12
18 In 1991, 49% of federal and 46.5% of state inmates had a high school degree (or
equivalent; Bureau of Justice Statistics 1994).
19 Testers reported working either as an assistant manager at a national restaurant
chain or as a supervisor at a national home retail store. While it is unlikely that the
modal occupational attainment for high school graduates (with or without crimina]
records) would be a supervisory position, this feature was added to the tester profiles
in order to make them more competitive applicants. The solid job histories of these
applicants should affect the results in a conservative direction, offering cues about the
tester's reliability and competence, which may offset some of the negative associations
with a criminal background.
1O See app. A for a discussion of additional methodological concerns.
"Though time out of the labor market is in fact one component of the total impact
of incarceration, this study sought to isolate the effect of criminal stigma from other
potential consequences of incarceration. Again, an estimate of the total effect of in-
carceration would also need to take account of employment difficulties resulting from
a prolonged tabor market absence.
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months .out of the labor force, representing the remainder of the total
prison time). The nonoffender, on the other hand, reported graduating
from high school one year later (thereby accounting for 12 months) and,
concurrent to his partner's six months of prison work time, worked for
a temporary agency doing a similar kind of low-skill work. Thus, the
actual amount of work experience was equivalent for both testers. The
effect of having the noncriminal graduate from high school one year later
should impose a conservative bias, as graduating from high school late
may indicate less motivation or ability.
A second major difference between audit studies of race or gender and
the present study is that criminal status is not something that can be
immediately discerned by the employer. The information had to be ex-
plicitly conveyed, therefore, in order for the interaction to become a "test."
In most cases, the tester was given the opportunity to communicate the
necessary information on the application form provided, in answer to the
question "Have you ever been convicted of a crime2f22 However, in the
26% of cases where the application form did not include a question about
criminal history, it was necessary to provide an alternate means of con-
veying this information. In the present study, testers provided two indirect
sources of information about their prior criminal involvement. First, as
mentioned above, the tester in the criminal record condition reported work
experience obtained while in the correctional facility. Second, the tester
listed his parole officer as a reference (calls to whom were recorded by
voicemail). These two pieces of evidence provided explicit clues to em-
ployers that the applicant had spent time in prison; and both of these
strategies are used by real ex-offenders who seek to account for empty
time by reporting work experience in prison or who wish to have their
parole officer vouch for their successful rehabilitation.23 Pilot tests with
employers in a neighboring city suggested that this strategy was an ef-
fective means of conveying the criminal record condition without arousing
suspicion.
STUDY CONTEXT AND DESCRIPTIVES
The fieldwork for this project took place in Milwaukee between June and
December of 2001. During this time, the economic condition of the met-
'~ To the extent that real ex-offenders lie about their criminal record on application
forms, this approach may lead to an overestimate of the effect of a criminal record.
See app. A for a discussion of this issue.
"This approach was developed in discussion with several Milwaukee employment
counselors and parole officers and is based on a composite profile of resumes belonging
to real ex-offenders.
951
American Journal of Sociology
ropolitan area remained moderately strong, with unemployment rates
ranging from a high of 5.2% in June to a low of 4% in September." It is
important to note that the results of this study are specific to the economic
conditions of this period. It has been well-documented in previous research
that the level of employment discrimination corresponds closely with the
tightness of the labor market (Freeman and Rodgers 1999). Certainly the
economic climate was a salient factor in the minds of these employers.
During a pilot interview, for example, an employer reported that a year
ago she would have had three applications for anentry-level opening,
today she gets 150.25 Another employer for a janitorial service mentioned
that previously their company had been so short of staff that they had
to interview virtually everyone who applied. The current conditions, by
contrast, allowed them to be far more selective. Since the completion of
this study, the unemployment rate has continued to rise. It is likely, there-
fore, that the effects reported here may understate the impact of race and
a criminal record in the context of an economic recession.
As mentioned earlier, the job openings for this study were selected fram
the Sunday classified section of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and from
Jobnet, astate-sponsored Internet job service. All job openings within a
25-mile radius of downtown Milwaukee were included, with 61% of the
resulting sample located in the suburbs or surrounding counties, relative
to only 39% in the city of Milwaukee. Because a limited boundary was
covered by this project, the distribution of jobs does not accurately rep-
resent the extent to which job growth has been concentrated in wider
suburban areas. According to a recent study of job growth in Milwaukee,
nearly 90% of entry-level job openings were located in the outlying coun-
ties and the Milwaukee county suburbs, with only 4% of full-time open-
ings located in the central city (Pawasarat and Quinn 2000).
The average distance from downtown in the present sample was 12
miles, with a substantial number of job openings located far from reach
by public transportation. Again, testers in this study represented a best
case scenario: all testers had their own reliable transportation, .allowing
them access to a wide range of employment opportunities. For the average
entry-level job seeker, by contrast, the suburbanization of low wage work
can in itself represent a major barrier to employment (Wilson 1997).
2° Monthly unemployment rates followed a U-shaped pattern, with higher levels of
unemployment in the first and last months of the study. Specifically: June (5.4%), July
(5.2%), August (4.8%), September (4.4%), October (4.7%), November (4.9%), December
(4.5%). National unemployment rates were nearly a point lower in June (4.6%), but
rose above Milwaukee's unemployment rate to a high of 5.8% in December (Bureau
of Labor Statistics 2002).
'S The unemployment rate in Milwaukee had been as Low as 2.7% in September of
1999 (Bureau of Labor Statistics 2002).
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Similar to other metropolitan labor markets, the service industry has
been the fastest growing sector in Milwaukee, followed by retail and
wholesale trade, and manufacturing (Pawasarat and Quinn 2000). Like-
wise, the sample of jobs in this study reflects similar concentrations,
though quite a range of job titles were included overall (table 1).
The most common job types were for restaurant workers (18%), laborers
or warehouse workers (17%), and production workers or operators (12%).
Though white collar positions were less common among the entry-level
listings, a fair number of customer service (I1%), sales (11%), clerical
(5%), and even a handful of managerial positions (2%) were included :b
Figure 4 presents some information on the ways employers obtain back-
ground information on applicants.Z' In this sample, roughly 75% of em-
ployers asked explicit questions on their application forms about the ap-
plicant's criminal history. Generally this was a standard question, "Have
you ever been convicted of a crime? If yes, please explain.f28 Even though
in most cases employers are not allowed to use criminal background
information to make hiring decisions, a vast majority of employers nev-
ertheless request the information.
A much smaller proportion of employers actually perform an official
background check. In my sample, 27% of employers indicated that they
would perform a background check on all applicants.29 This figure likely
represents slower-bound estimate, given that employers are not required
to disclose their intentions to do background checks. According to a na-
tional survey by Holzer (1996), 30%-40% of employers perform official
background checks on applicants for noncollege jobs. The point remains,
'b As noted above, this sample excludes health care workers-which represented the
largest category of entry-level job openings-and other occupations with legal restric-
tions on ex-felons (see app. A).
21 These are nonexclusive categories and are thus not meant to sum to 100.
i6 An overwhelming proportion of employers used generic questions about criminal
backgrounds (with the only major source of variation stemming from an emphasis on
all prior convictions vs. felonies only). A handful of large national companies, however,
used questions that reflected a more nuanced understanding of the law. One company,
e.g., instructed applicants not to answer the question if they were a resident of certain
specified states; another asked only about prior convictions for theft and burglary,
ignoring all other possible offenses.
1D The issue of official background checks raises some concern as to the validity of the
experimental condition, given that the information provided by testers can be
(dis)confirmed on the basis of other sources of information available to employers. In
cases where employers in this study did perform background checks on testers, the
check would come back clean (none of the testers in this study actually had criminal
records). It is my expectation that because employers would not expect someone to lie
about having a criminal record, and because employers know that criminal history
databases are fraught with errors, they would be inclined to believe the worst case
scenario-in this case, the self-report.
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American Journal of Sociology
TABLE 1
OCCUPATIONAL DISTRIBUTION
Job Title %
Waitstaff ................ 18
Laborer/warehouse ..... 17
Productionloperators ... 12
Service .................. it
Sales ..................... 11
Delivery driver ......... 9
Cashier .................. q
Cook kitchen staff ...... 5
Clerical .................. S
Managerial .............. Z
NOTE.-An excluded "other" category
combines the remaining 3% of job titles,
however, that fewer than half of all employers check criminal background
information through official sources 30
Finally, reference checks were included as an outcome in this study
with the belief that, for applicants with criminal records, having former
employers or a parole officer willing to vouch for the reliability and com-
petence of the individual would be critical. Additional voicemail boxes
were set up for references, such that each application could provide num-
bers for two functioning references. As it turns out, however, employers
seemed to pay virtually no attention to references whatsoever. Over the
course of the 350 audits completed, only four separate employers checked
references.31 Employers would frequently tell testers, "I'll just check your
references and then give you a call," or leave messages saying, "I'm going
to call your references, and then I'd like you to come in for a training
[session]," and yet no calls were registered.'Z
This finding emphasizes the point that employers do not go out of their
way to solicit nuanced information about applicants for entry-level jobs.
Rather, it is up to the applicant to convey the important information on
30 There is some indication that the frequency of criminal background checks has
increased since September 11, 2001. First Response Security, Inc., for example, saw a
25% increase in employers conducting background checks since that time (see http://
www.maine.rr.com/Around_Town/features2001/jobsinme/11_01/default.asp [last ac-
cessed Mazch 1, 2003ll.
" Taro additional employers made calls to the number listed for the parole officer on
the testers' applications. These calls, however, were not for the purpose of obtaining
additional background information about the candidate. Rather, in both cases, em-
ployers had made several calls to the tester about the job opening and, reaching only
his voicemail, were thus looking for an alternative way to track down the applicant.
'Z The voicemail system was setup in such a way that even hang-ups could be detected.
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100
90
80
w 70
~ 60
~ 50
~ 40
n. 3 0
20
io
0
Criminal Criminal Reference
Background Background Check
Question Check
(Self-report) (Official report)
Fcc. 4.-Background checks
the written application or during a brief interview. It is possible that a
larger number of employers do check references at a later stage of the
employment process (see Pager 2002). By this point, however, the ea-
offender has already likely been weeded out of the pool under
consideration.
The question now becomes, To what extent are applicants with criminal
records weeded out of the process at this initial stage? To answer this
question, I turn to the results of the audit study.
THE EFFECT OF A CRIlVIINAL RECORD FOR WHITES
I begin with an analysis of the effect of a criminal record among whites.
White noncriminals can serve as our baseline in the following compari-
sons, representing the presumptively nonstigmatized group relative to
blacks and those with criminal records. Given that all testers presented
roughly identical credentials, the differences experienced among groups
of testers can be attributed fully to the effects of race or criminal status.
Figure 5 shows the percentage of applications submitted by white testers
that elicited callbacks from employers, by criminal status. As illustrated
below, there is a large and significant effect of a criminal record, with
34% of whites without criminal records receiving callbacks, relative to
only 17% of whites with criminal records. A criminal record thereby
reduces the likelihood of a callback by 50% (see app. B for coefficients
from the logistic regression model).
There were some fairly obvious examples documented by testers that
illustrate the strong reaction among employers to the signal of a criminal
955
American Journal of Sociology
40
35
Y
~ 30
d 25
20
15
10
5
0
Criminal Record No Record
Fic. 5.-The effect of a criminal record on employment opportunities for whites. The
effect of a criminal record is statistically significant (P < .Ol).
record. In one case, a white tester in the criminal record condition went
to a trucking service to apply for a job as a dispatcher. The tester was
given a long application, including a complex math test, which took nearly
45 minutes to fill out. During the course of this process, there were several
details about the application and the job that needed clarification, some
of which involved checking with the supervisor about how to proceed.
No concerns were raised about his candidacy at this stage. When the
tester turned the application in, the secretary brought it into a back office
for the supervisor to look over, so that an interview could perhaps be
conducted. When the secretary came back out, presumably after the su-
pervisor had a chance to look over the application more thoroughly, he
was told the position had already been filled. While, of course, isolated
incidents like this are not conclusive, this was not an infrequent occur-
rence. Often testers reported seeing employers' levels of responsiveness
change dramatically once they had glanced down at the criminal record
question.
Clearly, the results here demonstrate that criminal records close doors
in employment situations. Many employers seem to use the information
as a screening mechanism, without attempting to probe deeper into the
possible context or complexities of the situation. As we can see here, in
50% of cases, employers were unwilling to consider equally qualified ap-
plicants on the basis of their criminal record.
Of course, this trend is not true among all employers, in all situations.
There were, in fact, some employers who seemed to prefer workers who
had been recently released from prison. One owner told a white tester in
the criminal record condition that he "like[d] hiring people who ha[d] just
956
Criminal Record.
come out of prison because they tend to be more motivated, and are more
likely to be hard workers [not wanting to return to prison]." Another
employer for a cleaning company attempted to dissuade the white non-
criminal tester from applying because the job involved "a great deal of
dirty work." The tester with the criminal record, on the other hand, was
offered the job on the spot. A criminal record is thus not an obstacle in
all cases, but on average, as we see above, it reduces employment op-
portunities substantially.
THE EFFECT OF RACE
A second major focus of this study concerns the effect of race. African-
Americans continue to suffer from lower rates of employment relative to
whites, but there is tremendous disagreement over the source of these
disparities. The idea that race itself-apart from other correlated char-
acteristics-continues to play a major role in shaping employment op-
portunities has come under question in recent years (e.g., D'Souza 1995;
Steele 1991). The audit methodology is uniquely suited to address this
question. While the present study design does not provide the kind of
cross-race matched-pair tests that earlier audit studies of racial discrim-
ination have used, the between-group comparisons (white pair vs. black
pair) can nevertheless offer an unbiased estimate of the effect of race on
employment opportunities.'3
Figure 6 presents the percentage of callbacks received for both cate-
gories of black testers relative to those for whites. The effect of race in
these findings is strikingly large. Among blacks without criminal records,
only 14% received callbacks, relative to 34% of white noncriminals (P <
"Between-pair comparisons provide less efficient estimators, but they are nevertheless
unbiased, provided that there aze no systematic differences between the sample of jobs
assigned to each pair or between the observed characteristics of the black and white
pair (apart fmm race). In this study, jobs were randomly assigned to tester pairs such
that no systematic differences should be observed between samples. Of course, it is
impossible, even in an experimental design, to rule out the possibility that unmeasured
differences between the black testers and the white testers systematically bias the results
(see Heckman and Siegelman 1993). This problem is one of the key limitations of the
audit design. In the present study, several attempts were made to minimize this source
of bias: first, testers were chosen based on similar physical and dispositioual chazac-
teristics to minimize differences from the outset; second, testers participated in an
extensive training (including numerous role plays) in which they learned to approach
employers in similar ways; third, testers used identical sets of resumes to ensure their
comparability on objective dimensions; and finally, the fact that this study tests only
the first stage of the employment process means that testers had little opportunity to
engage in the kind of extensive interaction that might elicit systematic differences in
treatment (based on factors other than rase).
95 7
American Journal of Sociology
40
35
Y
~ 30
~ 25
~ 20
~,
~ 15
10
a _
Fic. 6 -The effect of a criminal record for black and white job applicants. The main
effects of race and criminal record are statically significant (P <.Ol). The interaction between
the two is not significant in the full sample. Black bazs represent criminal record; striped
bars represent no criminal record.
.O1). In fact, even whites with criminal records received more favorable
treatment (17%) than blacks without criminal records (14%).34 The rank
ordering of groups in this graph is painfully revealing of employer pref-
erences: race continues to play a dominant role in shaping employment
opportunities, equal to or greater than the impact of a criminal record.
The magnitude of the race effect found here corresponds closely to
those found in previous audit studies directly measuring racial discrim-
ination. Bendick et al. (1994), for example, find that blacks were 24 per-
centage points less likely to receive a job offer relative to their white
counterparts, a finding very close to the 20 percentage point difference
(between white and black nonoffenders) found here.35 Thus in the eight
years since the last major employment audit of race was conducted, very
" This difference is not significantly different from zero. Given, however, that we would
expect black noncriminals to be favored (rather than equal) relative to criminals of
any race, the relevant null hypothesis should be positive rather than zero, thus gen-
erating aneven larger contrast.
'~ Here, I am relying on percentage point differences in order to compare equivalent
measures across studies. As I discuss below, however, I find it useful to rather calculate
relative differences (ratio tests) when comparing the magnitude of an effect across two
groups with different baseline rates. Unfortunately, the Bendick et al. (1994) study
does not include the raw numbers in its results, and it is thus not possible to calculate
comparative ratios in this case. Note also that the Bendick et al. (1994) study included
an assessment of the full hiring process, from application to job offer. The fact that
the racial disparities reported here (at the first stage of the employment process) closely
mirror those from more comprehensive studies provides further reassurance that this
design is capturing a majority of the discrimination that takes place in the hiring
process.
958
Black White
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little has changed in the reaction of employers to minority applicants.
Despite the many rhetorical arguments used to suggest that direct racial
discrimination is no longer a major barrier to opportunity (e.g., D'Souza
1995; Steele 1991), as we can see here, employers, at least in Milwaukee,
continue to use race as a major factor in hiring decisions.
RACIAL DIFFERENCES IN THE EFFECTS OF A CRIMINAL RECORD
The final question this study sought to answer was the degree to which
the effect of a criminal record differs depending on the race of the ap-
plicant. Based on the results presented in figure 6, the effect of a criminal
record appears more pronounced for blacks than it is for whites. While
this interaction term is not statistically significant, the magnitude of the
difference is nontrivial.36 While the ratio of callbacks for nonoffenders
relative to ex-offenders for whites is 2:1, this same ratio for blacks is
nearly 3:1." The effect of a criminal record is thus 40% larger for blacks
than for whites.
This evidence is suggestive of the way in which associations between
race and crime affect interpersonal evaluations. Employers, already re-
luctant to hire blacks, appear even more wary of blacks with proven
criminal involvement. Despite the face that these testers were bright ar-
ticulate college students with effective styles of self-presentation, the cur-
sory review of entry-level applicants leaves little room for these qualities
to be noticed. Instead, the employment barriers of minority status and
criminal record are compounded, intensifying the stigma toward this
group.
The salience of employers' sensitivity toward criminal involvement
among blacks was highlighted in several interactions documented by test-
ers. On three separate occasions, for example, black testers were asked
in person (before submitting their applications) whether they had a prior
'" This interaction between race and criminal record becomes significant when esti-
mated among particular subsamples (namely, suburban employers and employers with
whom the testers had personal contact). See Pager (2002) for a discussion of these
results.
"Previous audit studies, focusing on one comparison only, have often relied on net
differences in percentages as the primary measure of discrimination. Extending this
approach to the present design, it would likewise be possible to compare the percentage
point difference in treatment among white nonoffenders relative to offenders and that
of blacks (a difference in differences approach). Given that the baseline rate of callbacks
is substantially different for blacks and whites, however, this measure would be mis-
leading. In an absolute sense, whites have greater opportunity overall and thus have
more to lose. 'Faking into account this differential baseline, we see that the relative
effect of a criminal record is in fact smaller among whites than it is among blacks.
959
American Journal of Sociology
criminal history. None of the white testers were asked about their criminal
histories up front.
The strong association between race and crime in the minds of em-
ployers provides some indication that the "true effect" of a criminal record
for blacks may be even larger than what is measured here. If, for example,
the outcomes for black testers without criminal records were deflated in
part because employers feared that they may nevertheless have criminal
tendencies, then the contrast between blacks with and without criminal
records would be suppressed. Evidence for this type of statistical dis-
crimination can be found in the work of Bushway (1997) and Holzer,
Raphael, and Stoll (2001).
DISCUSSION
There is serious disagreement among academics, policy makers, and prac-
titioners over the extent to which contact with the criminal justice sys-
tem-in itself-leads to harmful consequences for employment. The pre-
sent study takes a strong stand in this debate by offering direct evidence
of the causal relationship between a criminal record and employment
outcomes. While survey research has produced noisy and indirect esti-
mates of this effect, the current research design offers a direct measure
of a criminal record as a mechanism producing employment disparities.
Using matched pairs and an experimentally assigned criminal record, this
estimate is unaffected by the problems of selection, which plague obser-
vational data. While certainly there are additional ways in which incar-
ceration may affect employment outcomes, this finding provides conclu-
sive evidence that mere contact with the criminal justice system, in the
absence of any transformative or selective effects, severely limits subse-
quent employment opportunities. And while the audit study investigates
employment barriers to ex-offenders from a microperspective, the impli-
cations are far-reaching. The finding that ex-offenders are only one-half
to one-third as likely as nonoffenders to be considered by employers sug-
gests that a criminal record indeed presents a major barrier to employ-
ment. With over 2 million people currently behind bars and over 12 million
people with prior felony convictions, the consequences for labor market
inequalities are potentially profound.
Second, the persistent effect of race on employment opportunities is
painfully clear in these results. Blacks are less than half as likely to receive
consideration by employers, relative to their white counterparts, and black
nonoffenders fall behind even whites with prior felony convictions. The
powerful effects of race thus continue to direct employment decisions in
ways that contribute to persisting racial inequality. In light of these find-
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ings, current public opinion seems largely misinformed. According to a
recent survey of residents in Los Angeles, Boston, Detroit, and Atlanta,
researchers found that just over a quarter of whites believe there to be
"a lot" of discrimination against blacks, compared to nearly two-thirds of
black respondents (Kluegel and Bobo 2001). Over the past decade, affir-
mative action has come under attack across the country based on the
azgument that direct racial discrimination is no longer a major bazrier to
opportunity.38 According to this study, however, employers, at least in
Milwaukee, continue to use race as a major factor in their hiring decisions.
When we combine the effects of race and criminal record, the problem
grows more intense. Not only are blacks much more likely to be incar-
cerated than whites; based on the findings presented here, they may also
be more strongly affected by the impact of a criminal record. Previous
estimates of the aggregate consequences of incarceration may therefore
underestimate the impact on racial disparities.
Finally, in terms of policy implications, this research has troubling
conclusions. In our frenzy of locking people up, our "crime control" pol-
icies may in fact exacerbate the very conditions that lead to crime in the
first place. Research consistently shows that finding quality steady employ-
ment is one of the strongest predictors of desistance from crime (Shover
1996; Sampson and Laub 1993; Uggen 2000). The fact that a criminal
record severely limits employment opportunities-particularly
among blacks-suggests that these individuals are left with few viable
alternatives.'9
As more and more young men enter the labor force from prison, it
'B In November 1996, California voters supported Proposition 209, which outlawed
affirmative action in public employment, educafion, and contracting. In the same year,
the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals suspended affirmative action in Texas in the case
of Hopwood vs. University of Texas law School.
"There are two primary policy recommendations implied by these results. First and
foremost, the widespread use of incarceration, particularly for nonviolent drug crimes,
has serious, long-term consequences for the employment problems of young men. The
substitution of alternatives to incazceration, therefore, such as drug treatment programs
or community supervision, may serve to better promote the well-being of individual
offenders as well as to improve public safety more generally through the potential
reduction of recidivism. Second, additional thought should be given to the widespread
availability of criminal background information. As criminal record databases become
increasingly easy to access, this information may be more often used as the basis for
rejecting otherwise qualified applicants. If instead criminal history information were
suppressed-except in cases that were clearly relevant to a pazticular kind of job
assignment-ex-offenders with appropriate credentials might be better able to secure
legitimate employment. While there is some indication that the absence of official
criminal background information may lead to a greater incidence of statistical dis-
crimination against blacks (see Bushway 1997; Holzer et al. 2001), the net benefits of
this policy change may in fact outweigh the potential drawbacks.
961
American Journal of Sociology
becomes increasingly important to consider the impact of incarceration
on the job prospects of those coming out. No longer a peripheral insti-
tution, the criminal justice system has become a dominant presence in
the lives of young disadvantaged men, playing a key role in the sorting
and stratifying of labor market opportunities. This article represents an
initial attempt to specify one of the important mechanisms by which
incarceration leads to poor employment outcomes. Future research is
needed to expand this emphasis to other mechanisms (e.g., the transfor-
mative effects of prison on human and social capital), as well as to include
other social domains affected by incarceration (e.g., housing, family for-
mation, political participation, etc.);40 in this way, we can move toward
a more complete understanding of the collateral consequences of incar-
ceration for social inequality.
At this point in history, it is impossible to tell whether the massive
presence of incarceration in today's stratification system represents a
unique anomaly of the late 20th century, or part of a larger movement
toward a system of stratification based on the official certification of in-
dividual character and competence. Whether this process of negative cre-
dentialing will continue to form the basis of emerging social cleavages
remains to be seen.
APPENDIX A
Methodological Concerns
Below I discuss some of the limitations of the audit methodology and
ways in which findings from an experimental design may conflict with
real-life contexts.
Limits to Generalizability
Reporting criminal backgrounds.-In the present study, testers in the crim-
inal record condition were instructed to provide an affirmative answer to
any question about criminal background posed on the application form
or in person. Employers are thus given full information about the {fic-
tional)criminal record of this applicant. But how often do real ex-offenders
offer such complete and honest information? To the extent that ex-
offenders lie about their criminal background in employment settings, the
results of this study may overestimate the effect of having a criminal
record. If employers do not know about an applicant's criminal record,
then surely it can have no influence on their hiring decisions.
"'For promising work in these areas, see Uggen and Manza (2002), Western and
McLanahan (2000), and 11~avis, Solomon, and Waul (2001).
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Before starting this project, I conducted a number of interviews with
parolees and men with criminal records. When asked how they handled
application forms, the majority of these men claimed to report their crim-
inal record up front. There are a number of reasons motivating this seem-
ingly irrational behavior. First, most men with criminal records believe
that the chances of being caught by a criminal background check are
much higher than they actually are. While a majority of employers do
not perform background checks on all applicants, there is the perception
that this practice is widespread. Second, most men coming out of prison
have a parole officer monitoring their reintegration. One of the most
effective mechanisms of surveillance for parole officers is to call employers
to make sure their parolees have been showing up for work. If the in-
dividual has not reported his criminal history, therefore, it may soon be
revealed."' There is thus a strong incentive for parolees to be up front in
their reporting.
A second source of information on this issue comes from interviews
with employers. In a second stage of this project, the same sample of
employers were interviewed about their hiring practices and experiences
(see Pager 2002). During these conversations, the employers were asked
to report what percentage of applicants over the past year had reported
a prior conviction and, among those employers who performed official
criminal background checks, what percentage were found to have criminal
records. According to the employers, roughly 12% of applicants over the
past year reported having a prior record on their application form. Of
those employers who perform official background checks, an average of
14% of applicants were found to have criminal records. The disparity
between self-reports and official records, therefore, is a minimal 2%. In
fact, one manager of a national restaurant chain mentioned that sometimes
applicants report more information than they need to. While the question
on the application form only asked about felony convictions over the past
year, this employer revealed that some applicants report misdemeanors
or felony convictions from several years back. Whatever the reason, there
seems to be evidence that far more ex-offenders report their prior con-
victions than "rational actor" models might predict. While surely some
ex-offenders do lie on their applications, there is reason to believe this is
far from the norm.
A related issue of study design concerns the reporting of criminal back-
ground information even when not solicited by the employer. Recall that
roughly one-quarter of employers did not ask explicit questions on their
" This is particularly consequential for employees in states such as Wisconsin, where
employers are not allowed to fire someone for having a criminal record, but they are
allowed to fire him for lying about his record.
963
American Journal of Sociology
application forms about an applicant's criminal history. In order to make
sure the experimental condition was known to all employers, testers also
reported work experience in the correctional facility and listed their parole
officers as references. While this strategy was based on a composite profile
of a number of real ex-offenders, in no way does it represent a modal
application procedure. In most cases, if employers do not ask about (or
check) criminal histories, they will never know. It is possible that in con-
veying the information artificially, the level of measured discrimination
is inflated. To address this concern, a direct test is possible. Figure Al
presents the callback rate for employers who did and did not solicit in-
formation about prior convictions.`Z
As is clear from this graph, employers who did not solicit information
about criminal histories were much less likely to use the information in
their hiring decisions. The disparity in treatment of ex-offenders relative
to nonoffenders among employers who did request the information (IZ%
vs. 35%) is more than twice as large as that among employers who did
not ask (25% vs. 33%). In terms of its correspondence to the "real world,"
therefore, providing unsolicited information about criminal backgrounds
did little to affect employer responses.
Represent¢tiveness of testers.-The testers in this study were bright,.
articulate college students with effective styles of self-presentation. The
interpersonal skills of the average inmate, by contrast, are likely to be
substantially less appealing to employers. The choice of testers in this
respect was deliberate, as a means of fully separating the signal of a
criminal record from other correlated attributes to which employers may
also respond. It is nevertheless important to consider the extent to which
these testers can be considered accurate representatives of the ex-offender
experience. On one hand, it may be the case that the testers in this study
represent a best case scenario. Because their interactional style does not
correspond to that of a stereotypical criminal, employers may be more
willing to consider them as viable candidates, despite their criminal back-
ground. In this case, the present study design would underestimate the
true effect of a criminal record. On the other hand, for individuals with
poor interpersonal skills, a criminal record may represent just one ad-
ditional-but less consequential-handicap to the already disadvantaged
candidate. If this is the case, the effect of a criminal record may be over-
estimated by the testers in the present study.
One approach to investigating this problem is to analyze those appli-
cations submitted with no personal contact with the employer." In these
" This figure presents the results for white testers only. Similar patterns are found for
black testers, not shown here.
"' Over 75% of applications were submitted with no personal contact with the employer.
964
Criminal Record
55
50
45
~ 40
~ 35
c'3 30
rn 25
20
15
a 10
5
0
Fic. Al.-Differences by whether criminal history information was solicited: black bars
represent criminal record; striped bars represent no criminal record.
cases, the interpersonal skills of the testers should have no influence on
the employer's consideration of the applicant. In the analysis reported in
figure A2, I find that the effect of a criminal record is even greater in the
absence of personal contact, relative to the overall findings reported ear-
lier.4° Personal contact appears to mediate the effect of a criminal record,
reducing its negative impact. These results are suggestive of the former
hypothesis: the interpersonal skills of testers in the present study, to the
extent that they are noticed by employers, serve to weaken the effect of
a criminal record. The estimates reported here, therefore, likely represent
a lower-bound estimate of the true effect of a criminal record.
The case of Milwaukee.-One key limitation of the audit study design
is its concentration on a single metropolitan area. The degree to which
the findings of each study can be generalized to the broader population,
therefore, remains in question. In the present study, Milwaukee was cho-
sen for having a profile common to many major American cities, with
respect to population size, racial composition, and unemployment rate.
There are, however, two unique features of Milwaukee that limit its rep-
resentativeness of other parts of the country. First, Milwaukee is the
second most segregated city in the country, implying great social distance
between blacks and whites, with possible implications for the results of
the audit study. )f race relations are more strained in Milwaukee than in
other parts of the country, then the effects of race presented in this study
may be larger than what would be found in other urban areas. Second,
Wisconsin had the third largest growth in incarceration rates in the coun-
"This figure presents the callback rates for white testers only.
965
Asked Not Asked
American Journal of Sociology
60
55
,~ 50
00 45
~ 40
35
w 30
25
20
~ 15
a
10
5
0
FiG. A2.-The effect of personal contact: black bars represent criminal record; striped
bars represent no criminal record.
try (Ga.insborough and Mauer 2000) and currently has the highest rate
of incarceration for blacks in the country (Bureau of Justice Statistics
2002b). If the statewide incarceration rates are reflective of an especially
punitive approach to crime, this could also affect the degree to which a
criminal record is condemned by employers, particularly among black
applicants.
Of course, the only way to directly address these issues is through
replication in additional areas. With respect to the main effect of race,
previous audit studies have been conducted in Washington, D.C., Chicago,
and Denver, confirming the basic magnitude of the effects reported here
(Bendick et al. 1994; Turner et al. 1991; Culp and Dunson 1986). Likewise,
a recent correspondence of the effects of race on a more restrictive sample
of occupations in Boston and Chicago produced strikingly similar esti-
mates (Bertrand and Mullainathan 2002). These results, therefore, provide
some indication that Milwaukee is not a major outlier in its level of racial
discrimination in hiring.
In the case of the criminal record effect, only future studies can confirm
or contradict the results presented here. As the first study of its kind, it
is impossible to assess the degree to which these findings will generalize
to other cities. Looking to existing survey research, however, we can gain
some leverage on this issue. According to a recent survey conducted by
Holzer and Stoll (2001), employers in Milwaukee reported substantially
greater openness to considering applicants with criminal records relative
to their counterparts in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Cleveland. if these
self-reports accurately reflect employers' relative hiring tendencies, then
we would expect the results of this audit study to provide conservative
966
No Personal Personal
Contact Contact
(76%) (24%)
Criminal Record
estimates of the barriers to employment faced by ex-offenders in other
metropolitan areas.
Sample restrictions.-The present study was intended to assess the
effect of a criminal record on employment in entry-level jobs. In order to
obtain a sample of such positions for use in this study, however, it was
necessary to impose certain sample restrictions on the categories of entry-
level employment to be included. The degree to which these restrictions
affect the generalizability of these findings to real employment searches
therefore warrants careful consideration.
Virtually all employment audits have relied on samples of job openings
identified through ads in metropolitan newspapers. Though want ads
provide an easily accessible listing of job vacancies, research on actual
job search behavior demonstrates that only a minority of jobs are found
through this source. Holzer (1988) estimates that roughly 20%-25% of
search time is spent on contacts generated by newspaper advertising;
friends and relatives and direct contact of firms by applicants represent
a much more common sources of new employment.
Though it would preferable to include job vacancies derived from rep-
resentative sources, it is difficult if not impossible to map the network of
informal contacts that lead to most job opportunities. Instead, researchers
have relied upon sources that allow for systematic and consistent sampling
schemes, despite the reduction in representativeness. Following previous
research, the present study relies upon a random sample of job openings
from advertised sources (the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Jobnet).
Fortunately, there is compelling research to suggest that the restricted
sample provides a more conservative estimate of racial discrimination.
Firms who wish to discriminate, it is argued, are more likely to advertise
job openings through more restrictive channels than the metropolitan
newspaper, such as through referrals, employment agencies, or more se-
lective publications (Fix and Struyk 1993, p. 32). Indeed, this argument
is indirectly supported by research showing that minorities are more suc-
cessful in job searches generated by general newspaper ads than through
other means (Holzer 1987). Further, pilot audits conducted by the Fair
Employment Council in Washington, D.C., also indicate lower rates of
discrimination against minorities in jobs advertised in metropolitan news-
papers than those advertised in suburban newspapers or through em-
ployment agencies (Bendick et al. 1991, 1994).
In the case of ex-offenders, personal networks may represent a more
important source of employment. Though there have been few systematic
investigations of the search methods of individuals coming out of prison,
small-scale case studies indicate that personal referrals can be extremely
important for the job placement of this population (Nelson, Deess, and
Allen 1999; Sullivan 1989). Because of the pervasive discrimination faced
967
American Journal of Sociology
by ex-offenders in the labor market as a whole, personal networks can
direct individuals to specific employers who are willing to hire applicants
with criminal records. In this case, ex-offenders may be likely to queue
for lower-quality jobs that accept applicants with criminal histories rather
than applying for the wider range of (higher-quality) employment among
which they are likely to face more severe discrimination. If this is the
case, incarceration effects would be more likely to show up in estimates
of earnings and job security, rather than employment probabilities as
measured here (see Western 2002). Future research mapping the search
patterns of ex-offenders would provide useful information with which to
evaluate the types of jobs in which ex-offenders are most at risk of
discrimination.
It is important to note, however, that the importance of social networks
for ex-offenders seeking employment may differ across racial groups. Sul-
livan (1989), for example, reports that, among juvenile delinquents, whites
and Hispanics were readily placed in employment through relatives or
extended networks following release from incarceration; blacks, by con-
trast, benefited much less from social networks in finding work. These
informal methods of job search behavior, therefore, may in fact result in
greater evidence of racial disparities in employment following incarcer-
ation than what is reported here.
Prior to sampling, the following additional restrictions were imposed
(for reasons discussed below): not hiring through employment agency, no
more than high school degree required, no public sector positions, no
health care positions, no jobs related to the care of children or the elderly,
and no jobs whose announcements explicit stated security clearance
required.
The restrictions with the largest effect on my sample are those related
to employment agencies and the health care industry. Employment agen-
cies are becoming increasingly dominant in regulating the market for
entry-level labor. Between 35% and 40% of jobs advertised through Job-
net (the Internet employment bulletin) were temporary to permanent po-
sitions through an employment agency. There exists quite a bit of literature
on the quality of temporary employment and the treatment of workers
hired through employment agencies (Henson 1996). An audit of employ-
ment agencies, however, warrants an independent study, given the very
different hiring processes operating in such establishments.
The elimination of health care positions from my sample was due to
the extensive legal restrictions in this sector barring the employment of
individuals with criminal records.45 This sample constraint eliminated a
`~ Such restrictions also apply to occupations involving care for children or the elderly
and many public sector positions.
968
Criminal Record
huge number of jobs otherwise available to entry-level job seekers without
criminal records. The health services sector represents 8.3% of total em-
ployment in the Milwaukee region (COWS 1996), and a much larger share
of new employment. Hospitals alone were the fourth largest employers
in Milwaukee in 1995 (COWS 1996). These are some of the highest-wage
jobs in the service sector (COWS 1996).
Other occupations were likewise eliminated from the sample, not be-
cause of blanket legal restrictions, but because their job announcements
explicitly stated that applicants must pass a criminal background check
or that security clearance was required. While it is not clear that blanket
exclusion of all criminal convictions in these cases was defensible under
the law, the employers' policies were made explicit. While one cannot
always assume that stated policies will be enforced, in the case of criminal
records, these jobs are unlikely to demonstrate much variance.
A true estimate of the collateral consequences of a criminal record on
employment opportunities would take into account the large number of
jobs formally closed to ex-offenders (rather than just those demonstrating
a preference for or against applicants with criminal records). The estimates
produced from the audits, therefore, represent only part of the total effect
of a criminal record of the likelihood of finding employment.
Experimenter E.,~`ects
One potential weakness of the audit study methodology is that the ex-
pectations or behaviors of testers can influence the outcome of results in
nonrandom ways. In the course of this research, it became apparent that
testers may in fact (unconsciously) behave differently depending on the
experimental condition. With respect to the criminal record condition,
several testers commented that they felt irrationally bad about themselves
when presenting themselves as ex-offenders. If it is the case that these
feelings made them more self-conscious or more reticent or nervous when
speaking with employers, then this behavior in itself may lead to spurious
outcomes. These psychological reactions may be even more pronounced
in the case of black testers. One tester early on reported feelings of dis-
couragementand frustration that he had received very few responses from
employers. As a successful, bright college student, the change in status to
a young black criminal was extreme, and the difference in treatment he
received seemed to take a toll. Fortunately, after gaining more experience
with the project, this tester (and others) seemed to feel more comfortable
in their interactions and better able to perform in their assigned roles.
It is certainly the case that the psychological experiences of testers can
influence the outcome of audit studies in nontrivial ways. It is unlikely,
however, that these internal dynamics are the driving force behind the
969
American Journal of Sociology
results reported from this study. As noted earlier, in a vast majority of
cases, testers had little if any contact with employers. Given that a ma-
jority of callbacks were made on the basis of applications submitted with.
little or no personal contact, the internal disposition of the tester is unlikely
to exert much influence. The finding that personal contact actually served
to weaken the effect of a criminal record (see fig. A2 above) provides
further evidence that the friendly, appealing qualities of the testers were
apparent to employers, even among applicants in 'the criminal record
eondition.
APPENDIX B
TABLE B1
LOGISTIC REGRESSION OF THE EFFECTS OF CRIMINAL RECORD
AND RACE ON APPLICANTS' LIKELIHOOD OF RECEIVING A
CALLBACK
Coefficient Robust SE
Criminal record .............. -.99 .24***
Slack ......................... -1.25 .28*s*
Criminal record x black ... -.29 .38
NoTe.-SEs are corrected for clustering on employer ID in order to accotmt
[er the fact that these data contain two records per employer (.e., critnimal
ranrd versus no criminal record). This model also controls for location (city
vs. suburb) and contact with the employer, variables that mediate the relation-
between race, crime, and employer responses.
~ P < .001.
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975
Documents related
to the
Regular Meeting of
the Ad Hoc
Committee on Crime,
Weapons, Gang
Violence and
Community Relations
April 19, 2007
Team Prodigy Elite Athletics for at Risk* Youth
The organization will be hosting its second annual. basketball tournament which
is scheduled to be hosted on May 27-28, 2007 at the Martin Luther King Jr
Community Center. The following is our agenda.
AGENDA
1. Insurance for the Gymnasium
-Cost per day $144.52
2. Obtain conformation from potential teams
-$150.00 per team
3.Concession stand
-parents/volunteers
-items to be sold (gatorade, water,soda, hot dogs, nachos,chips, candy)
-amount to purchase items $300.00
4.Stop The Violence Committee
-need conformation of their participation
5.® ~ Las Vegas tournament
6.Schedule press release for the donation from Joey Porter ($5000.00 for team
uniforms and equipment)
Vision: For at risk` and disadvantaged youth of Bakersfield to use their scholar and athletic abilkies to achieve a college
education to that they will return to their communities as productive leaders and mentors.
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Creedngs From
The Sisff of
TEAM PRODIGY
ELITE ATHLETICS
Welcome,
Coach D and wife, Tammy Williams, formed Prodigy Athletics for at-risk youths as a
tool to motivate young people to do well in school, obey their parents and most
importantly, steer clear of gangs. Our kids participate in various athletics ranging from
Basketball, football, tennis and chess. Since 2003 our athletics have traveled all over
California competing in their various sports. They are an intelligent and talented group
of kids. It has been my pleasure to have the opportunity to coach and mentor these future
leaders. So far, we have been able to achieve these goals without aid of sponsorship. If
you or your business would like to support these athletes to becoming productive adults
that will better this nation in our near future, your contribution would be greatly be
appreciated. Please contact Devon Johnson or Tammy Williams at phone number -
(661) 322-7441 or (661) 717-5675. E-mail address: TAI-LKANN116na aol com.
Thank you in advance for assistance.
Sincerely,
Davon Johnson
Founder and Head Coach
Prodigy Atthletics
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Mission: To teach at risk* youth the skills and discipline required to compete at a varsity level of athletics.
Vision: For at risk* and disadvantage youth of Bakersfield to use their scholar and athletic abilities to achieve a college education
to that they will return to their communities as productive leaders and mentors.
MEET THE TEAM PRODIGY ELITE'S PLAYERS
2
TEAM PRODIGY 4TN GRADE TEAM
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MEET THE TEAM PRODIGY' S PLAYERS
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MEET THE TEAM PRODIGY'S TEAMS
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TEAM PRODIGY STN GRADE TEAM
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1' rn uitrrez {right)
4th Grade
Berkshire School
1st place 400 meter Valley Relays
{right)
6th Grade
Fairfax School
Chess Ciub Member
5
Simon Baloster s
6th Grade
Longfellow School
4.0 G.PJL
GO TEAM PRODIGY.
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TIME: Sam - 8pm
MADDEN 06 -FOOTBALL
Video-Mania is being aired on:
GOSPEL CONNECTION
Saturday: KERI 1180 AM
(~: OOp. m. 6: OOp. m.)
Sunday KARL 88.3 FM
(6: 3 ~ a. m. -9: OOc~. J?2.
POWER JAM .org 1180 AM
Saturday: - (3: OOp. m. -4: OOp. m.)
Sunday. KGEO AM 1230
(7: OOa. in. -8: OOa. m.)
"THE GROOVE"- 99.3 FM
(Doll Frce)
The City of Bakersfield is actively involved in a variety of efforts to address gang activity
in our community. This includes a number of gang prevention activities involving youth
such as the Police Department's GREAT program and a variety of recreational programs
and activities provided by the City's Recreation and Parks Department. We know that
the best way to address this issue is at a grassroots level involving the entire community.
Therefore, we are looking for individuals who are willing to support gang prevention
activities and programs throughout the community.
In addition to the efforts of the City of Bakersfield, there are numerous agencies and
organizations that provide programs and activities which are focused on gang prevention
activities such as mentoring, job training and other positive activities for youth which can
provide an alternative to gang participation. Contributions can be made directly to these
organizations.
Alternately, contributions may also be made in support of community-wide gang
prevention activities to the Bakersfield Foundation, anon-profit corporation. Those who
would like to contribute towards these efforts may do so by making a contribution
payable to the "Bakersfield Foundation" and sending it to Nelson Smith, Finance
Director at 1501 Truxtun Avenue, Bakersfield, CA 93301. Contributors should also
indicate on the check that the donation is for "gang prevention activities."
SAFE NEIGHBORHOODS COMMITTEE
Thursday, April 19, 2007
ATTENDANCE LIST
Name Organization Contact: Phone/ E-mail
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